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Effective harvesting, detection, and conversion of ir radiation due to quantum dots with built-in charge

  • Kimberly Sablon
  • , Andrei Sergeev
  • , Nizami Vagidov
  • , Andrei Antipov
  • , John Little
  • , Vladimir Mitin
  • U.S. Army Research Laboratory
  • SUNY Buffalo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

We analyze the effect of doping on photoelectron kinetics in quantum dot [QD] structures and find two strong effects of the built-in-dot charge. First, the built-in-dot charge enhances the infrared [IR] transitions in QD structures. This effect significantly increases electron coupling to IR radiation and improves harvesting of the IR power in QD solar cells. Second, the built-in charge creates potential barriers around dots, and these barriers strongly suppress capture processes for photocarriers of the same sign as the built-in-dot charge. The second effect exponentially increases the photoelectron lifetime in unipolar devices, such as IR photodetectors. In bipolar devices, such as solar cells, the solar radiation creates the built-in-dot charge that equates the electron and hole capture rates. By providing additional charge to QDs, the appropriate doping can significantly suppress the capture and recombination processes via QDs. These improvements of IR absorption and photocarrier kinetics radically increase the responsivity of IR photodetectors and photovoltaic efficiency of QD solar cells.

Original languageEnglish
Article number584
Pages (from-to)1-13
Number of pages13
JournalNanoscale Research Letters
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2011

Keywords

  • Capture processes
  • Doping
  • Infrared photodetector
  • Photoresponse
  • Potential barrier
  • Quantum dot
  • Solar cell

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