Unveiling the Hot Carrier Distribution in Vertical Graphene/h-BN/Au van der Waals Heterostructures for High-Performance Photodetector

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Mar 4;12(9):10772-10780. doi: 10.1021/acsami.9b19904. Epub 2020 Feb 18.

Abstract

Graphene is one of the most promising materials for photodetectors due to its ability to convert photons into hot carriers within approximately 50 fs and generate long-lived thermalized states with lifetimes longer than 1 ps. In this study, we demonstrate a wide range of vertical photodetectors having a graphene/h-BN/Au heterostructure in which an hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) insulating layer is inserted between an Au electrode and graphene photoabsorber. The photocarriers effectively tunnel through the small hole barrier (1.93 eV) at the Au/h-BN junction while the dark carriers are highly suppressed by a large electron barrier (2.27 eV) at the graphene/h-BN junction. Thus, an extremely low dark current of ∼10-13 A is achieved, which is 8 orders of magnitude lower than that of graphene lateral photodetector devices (∼10-5 A). Also, our device displays an asymmetric photoresponse behavior due to photothermionic emission at the graphene/h-BN and Au/h-BN junctions. The asymmetric behavior generates additional thermal carriers (hot carriers) to enable our device to generate photocurrents that can overcome the Schottky barrier. Furthermore, our device shows the highest value of the Iph/Idark ratio of ∼225 at 7 nm thick h-BN insulating layer, which is 3 orders of magnitude larger than that of the previously reported graphene lateral photodetectors without any active materials. In addition, we achieve a fast response speed of 12 μs of rise time and 5 μs of fall time, which are about 100 times faster than those of other graphene integrated photodetectors.

Keywords: 2D material; graphene; h-BN; hot carrier; photodetector; tunneling.