High-performance hierarchical O-SnS/I-ZnIn2S4 photodetectors by leveraging the synergy of optical regulation and band tailoring†
Abstract
Low light absorption and limited carrier lifetime are critical obstacles inhibiting further performance improvement of 2D layered material (2DLM) based photodetectors, while scalable fabrication is an ongoing challenge prior to commercialization from the lab to market. Herein, wafer-scale SnS/ZIS hierarchical nanofilms, where out-of-plane SnS (O-SnS) is modified onto in-plane ZIS (I-ZIS), have been achieved by pulsed-laser deposition. The derived O-SnS/I-ZIS photodetector exhibits markedly boosted sensitivity as compared to a pristine ZIS device. The synergy of multiple functionalities contributes to the dramatic improvement, including the pronounced light-trapping effect of O-SnS by multiple scattering, the high-efficiency spatial separation of photogenerated electron–hole pairs by a type-II staggered band alignment and the promoted carrier transport enabled by the tailored electronic structure of ZIS. Of note, the unique architecture of O-SnS/I-ZIS can considerably expedite the carrier dynamics, where O-SnS promotes the electron transfer from SnS to ZIS whilst the I-ZIS enables high-speed electron circulation. In addition, the interlayer transition enables the bridging of the effective optical window to telecommunication wavelengths. Moreover, monolithic integration of arrayed devices with satisfactory device-to-device variability has been encompassed and a proof-of-concept imaging application is demonstrated. On the whole, this study depicts a fascinating functional coupling architecture toward implementing chip-scale integrated optoelectronics.