4.8 Review

Emerging Single-Photon Detectors Based on Low-Dimensional Materials

Journal

SMALL
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202103963

Keywords

avalanche; low-dimensional materials; photogating; single-photon detectors; superconducting

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62005303, 62004207, 31900748, 61904184, 61975224]
  2. International Partnership Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [181331KYSB20200012]
  3. Royal Society-Newton Advanced Fellowship [NA170214]

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This article introduced the working principles of single-photon detectors and conventional SPDs, and discussed new photon-counting detectors based on 0D, 1D, and 2D materials. These low-dimensional materials exhibit exotic properties due to the quantum confinement effect, potentially used for ultra-weak light detection.
Single-photon detectors (SPDs) that can sense individual photons are the most sensitive instruments for photodetection. Established SPDs such as conventional silicon or III-V compound semiconductor avalanche diodes and photomultiplier tubes have been used in a wide range of time-correlated photon-counting applications, including quantum information technologies, in vivo biomedical imaging, time-of-flight 3D scanners, and deep-space optical communications. However, further development of these fields requires more sophisticated detectors with high detection efficiency, fast response, and photon-number-resolving ability, etc. Thereby, significant efforts have been made to improve the performance of conventional SPDs and to develop new photon-counting technologies. In this review, the working mechanisms and key performance metrics of conventional SPDs are first summarized. Then emerging photon-counting detectors (in the visible to infrared range) based on 0D quantum dots, 1D quantum nanowires, and 2D layered materials are discussed. These low-dimensional materials exhibit many exotic properties due to the quantum confinement effect. And photodetectors built from these nD-materials (n = 0, 1, 2) can potentially be used for ultra-weak light detection. By reviewing the status and discussing the challenges faced by SPDs, this review aims to provide future perspectives on the research directions of emerging photon-counting technologies.

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