4.5 Article

Non-Fullerene Acceptor Organic Photodetector for Skin-Conformable Photoplethysmography Applications

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admi.202101897

Keywords

bulk heterojunctions; non-fullerene-acceptor; organic photodetectors; organic semiconductors; photoplethysmography

Funding

  1. RFF Forskningsfond Oslofjordfondet [285575]
  2. Chongqing Education Commission-Science and Technology Research Program [KJZD-K201900802, KLZD-K202000805]
  3. RFF Vestfold og Telemark [321814]
  4. Chongqing Research Program of Basic Research and Frontier Technology [Cstc2018jcyjax0474, Cstc2018jcyjA3877, cstc2019jcyj-msxmX0776]

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This study developed a new flexible organic photodiode with improved sensitivity and performance in the near-infrared range by optimizing the structure and materials of the photodetector. By integrating the photodiode into a photoplethysmography sensor, oxygen saturation and heart rate were successfully measured.
Commercial photoplethysmography (PPG) sensors and other biomedical devices that require near-infrared (NIR) light detection are limited by rigid photodetector architectures that cannot interface comfortably with skin. Flexible organic photodetectors could potentially solve this problem; however, organic photodetectors suffer from low NIR sensitivity, largely due to the early absorption cutoffs originating from the use of fullerene acceptors. This work details a new flexible organic photodiode (OPD) based on narrow bandgap non-fullerene-acceptor (NFA) bulk heterojunction (BHJ) incorporating a PTB7-Th and COTIC-4F blend. The photodetector developed for this study reaches an external an external quantum efficiency (EQE) to 60% in the 600-1000 nm range and responsivity (R) as high as approximate to 0.42 A W-1. Through the integration of a PEDOT:PSS and PDINO interfacial layers, undesired carrier injection is suppressed, and a detectivity (D*) in the order of approximate to 10(13) Jones is achieved. In addition, oxygen saturation and heart rate are successfully measured by integrating the developed photodiode in a PPG sensor.

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