4.8 Article

A high performance, visible to mid-infrared photodetector based on graphene nanoribbons passivated with HfO2

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 327-332

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5nr06869j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Singapore [MOE2011-T2-2-147, MOE2011-T3-1-005]
  2. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Young Investigatorship [0926030138]
  3. SERC [092154099]
  4. National Research Foundation [NRF-CRP 8-2011-07]

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Graphene has drawn tremendous attention as a promising candidate for electronic and optoelectronic applications owing to its extraordinary properties, such as broadband absorption and ultrahigh mobility. Nevertheless, the absence of a bandgap makes graphene unfavorable for digital electronic or photonic applications. Although patterning graphene into nanostructures with the quantum confinement effect is able to open a bandgap, devices based on these graphene nanostructures generally suffer from low carrier mobility and scattering losses. In this paper, we demonstrated that encapsulation of an atomic layer deposited high-quality HfO2 film will greatly enhance the carrier mobility and decrease the scattering losses of graphene nanoribbons, because this high-k dielectric layer weakens carrier coulombic interactions. In addition, a photodetector based on HfO2 layer capped graphene nanoribbons can cover broadband wavelengths from visible to mid-infrared at room temperature, exhibiting similar to 10 times higher responsivity than the one without a HfO2 layer in the visible regime and similar to 8 times higher responsivity in the mid-infrared regime. The method employed here could be potentially used as a general approach to improve the performance of graphene nanostructures for electronic and optoelectronic applications.

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