4.8 Article

Air-Stable Low-Symmetry Narrow-Bandgap 2D Sulfide Niobium for Polarization Photodetection

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 45, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202005037

Keywords

2D materials; low-symmetry materials; mid-infrared photodetectors; photobolometric effect; polarization; sulfide niobium

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11734016, 61925402, 61905266, 31900748, 61975224, 61674157, 61725505]
  2. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [19XD1404100, 19JC1416600]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program [2017YFB0405600]
  4. Shanghai Education Development Foundation
  5. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission Shuguang Program [18SG01]
  6. China Post-doctoral Science Foundation (pre-station) [2019TQ0333, 2019TQ0334]

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Low-symmetry 2D materials with unique anisotropic optical and optoelectronic characteristics have attracted a lot of interest in fundamental research and manufacturing of novel optoelectronic devices. Exploring new and low-symmetry narrow-bandgap 2D materials will be rewarding for the development of nanoelectronics and nano-optoelectronics. Herein, sulfide niobium (NbS3), a novel transition metal trichalcogenide semiconductor with low-symmetry structure, is introduced into a narrowband 2D material with strong anisotropic physical properties both experimentally and theoretically. The indirect bandgap of NbS(3)with highly anisotropic band structures slowly decreases from 0.42 eV (monolayer) to 0.26 eV (bulk). Moreover, NbS(3)Schottky photodetectors have excellent photoelectric performance, which enables fast photoresponse (11.6 mu s), low specific noise current (4.6 x 10(-25)A(2)Hz(-1)), photoelectrical dichroic ratio (1.84) and high-quality reflective polarization imaging (637 nm and 830 nm). A room-temperature specific detectivity exceeding 10(7)Jones can be obtained at the wavelength of 3 mu m. These excellent unique characteristics will make low-symmetry narrow-bandgap 2D materials become highly competitive candidates for future anisotropic optical investigations and mid-infrared optoelectronic applications.

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