RESEARCH NEWS STORY
Chung-Ang
University Researchers Unveil the Mechanism of Noise and Signal Detection, Enhancing
Organic Photodetector Performance for Advanced Image Sensors
Researchers interpret
the dominant mechanism for unexpected charge injection in organic photodetectors
The performance of organic photodetectors
(OPDs) is degraded by noise. Although charge injection is the major source of
dark current in the photodetector, few studies have been conducted to determine
the noise origin in OPDs. To this end, researchers from Chung-Ang University, Korea,
have experimentally interpreted the dominant mechanism of dark current
generated in OPDs with theoretical calculation, paving the way for improved photoconductors.
Title: Researchers determine the dominant mechanism for dark current generation
in organic photodetectors
Caption: In a new study,
Chung-Ang University researchers experimentally interpreted the mechanism of
noise and signal detection in organic photodetectors with theoretical
calculation. Their findings will facilitate development of better devices with
faster response as well as excellent detection.
Credit: Copyright
(2023) Advanced Functional Materials.
License type: Wiley
Online Library (The current cover photo is unpublished. It is scheduled for
January. The paper was published online.) (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adfm.202209615)
Organic photodetectors (OPDs) are
the "eyes" of the image sensor and can be applied to various diode
systems for next-generation advanced devices. The distinct advantages of OPDs over
conventional inorganic photodetectors are their extreme flexibility and low
power requirement. However, noise in OPDs impedes performance. Therefore, noise
reduction is important for enhancing the performance of OPDs.
Several mechanisms
potentially induce the origin of noise. Among them, thermionic emission (the flow
of charged particles from a charged metal surface, owing to the thermal energy
overcoming the electrostatic binding forces) and direct electron tunnelling (a quantum-mechanical
process by which an electron can penetrate a potential barrier even when the
energy of the particle is lower than the barrier height), are possible models
at low applied bias. However, the dominant noise-causing mechanism remained
hitherto unknown.
To this end, a research
collaboration led by Professor Dong Hwan Wang and his post-doctoral
researcher Dr. Woongsik Jang from the School of Integrative Engineering in
Chung-Ang University, Korea investigated dark current in OPDs by experimentally
modeling mechanisms related with the thermionic emission and tunneling to ascertain
the dominant cause of noise
generated in an OPD. The researchers presented their findings in a recent article made available
online on November 4, 2022, in Advanced Functional Materials. In addition, the scientific
achievements of this study were introduced through the domestic magazine.
“Despite many efforts to
reduce noise in OPDs, little work has been done to identify the mechanism of
the origin of noise.”, explains Prof. Wang. The team experimentally demonstrated
that the formation of a barrier energy for charge carriers formed as the
“Schottky barrier”, a metal–semiconductor junction at the
electrode–photosensitive layer interface, bias and thermal energy together enable
charge injection from one electrode to the other. This, in turn, becomes dark
current.
The researchers analyzed
correlations between current and voltage to demystify the origin of noise. They
confirmed the relationship between current and barrier energy by controlling
three acceptors with different energy levels by adjusting the barrier energies.
The researchers unearthed a linear relationship between the natural logarithm
of the dark current density under reverse bias and the square root of the Schottky
barrier height. This finding strongly points to direct tunneling as the
dominant mechanism for dark current injection.
Armed with the mechanism of the origin
of noise, the team developed an OPD with an efficient injection barrier that
enhances detection speed owing to noise suppression. The OPDs developed in this
research can be expanded to facilitate a curved design allowing a miniature
form factor without color filter. “We could achieve these incredible
features owing to interpretation of noise generated in OPDs. The curved design
OPDs developed are capable of 100% omnidirectional sensing without the
constraints of lens design and can detect singular wavelengths”, notes Prof.
Wang.
Taken together, this development experimentally
demonstrates the primary, dominant mechanism of noise in OPDs with theorical
calculation, which leads to fast response as well as excellent detection. This enables
high integration density of hundreds of millions of pixels owing to the
miniaturization of the image sensor by introducing the OPDs. Further research
on the dominant noise-causing mechanism contributes to suppress dark current for
improved OPD performance in advanced applications.
Reference
Authors
Title of
original paper
Journal |
Woongsik Jang1,2, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen2, and Dong
Hwan Wang1
Theoretical and Experimental Investigation of BarrierEnergy-Dependent
Charge Injection Mechanisms in Organic Photodetectors
|
|
|
DOI
Affiliations |
https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202209615
1School of Integrative Engineering Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea 2Center for Polymers and Organic Solids and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of California at Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, CA, USA |
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Chung-Ang University
About Chung-Ang University
Chung-Ang
University is a private comprehensive research university located in Seoul,
South Korea. It was started as a kindergarten in 1916 and attained university
status in 1953. It is fully accredited by the Ministry of Education of Korea.
Chung-Ang University conducts research activities under the slogan of “Justice
and Truth.” Its new vision for completing 100 years is “The Global Creative
Leader.” Chung-Ang University offers undergraduate, postgraduate, and doctoral
programs, which encompass a law school, management program, and medical school;
it has 16 undergraduate and graduate schools each. Chung-Ang University’s
culture and arts programs are considered the best in Korea.
Website: https://neweng.cau.ac.kr/index.do
About Professor Dong Hwan Wang and Dr.
Woongsik Jang
Prof. Dong Hwan Wang obtained his PhD degree in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering from
KAIST in 2012 and joined the group of Professor Alan J. Heeger (Novel Prize Winner
in Chemistry, 2000) at the University of California, Santa Barbara in 2012–2014
as a postdoctoral research fellow. He is currently a professor at the School of
Integrative Engineering in Chung-Ang University since 2014. He is full
professor from 2020 with over 130 published SCI papers. His research interests
include solution processed organic electronics such as organic and perovskite
solar cells, organic photodetectors fabricated by newly designed nanomaterials,
and nanostructure with specific optoelectronic properties.
Dr. Woongsik Jang is currently post-doctoral researcher of Prof. Dong
Hwan Wang’s group at the school of integrative engineering in Chung-Ang
university. He received his Ph.D. degree in 2022, and his research interests
include organic/perovskite solar cells and organic photodetectors. He is an
excellent student in CAU with currently published 50 important SCI papers.