Achievement of high-performance MISIM-structured Ga2O3-based photodetectors via tailoring of the Al content in AlxHfyO
Abstract
Ga2O3 has an ultra-wide bandgap of 4.9 eV, making it an ideal semiconductor material for solar-blind photodetectors (SBPDs). However, a large number of defects are often present in Ga2O3 thin films, leading to typically high dark currents in Ga2O3-based SBPDs. Although the traditional annealing method is effective in reducing dark current, it often impairs the photoresponse of the fabricated device. In this study, we employ ultra-thin AlxHfyO (0 ≤ x, y ≤ 1) insulating layers to modulate the interface electronic structure of the metal–insulator–semiconductor–insulator–metal structured Ga2O3-based SBPDs and improve the overall performance of the fabricated SBPDs. For the Ga2O3-based SBPD regulated with Al1Hf0O (Al2O3), the photocurrent increases by approximately 37 times, while the dark current remains nearly unchanged. However, a degradation in both the response time and the cutoff characteristics is observed. In contrast, the SBPD regulated with appropriate stacked Al2O3 and HfO2 materials (Al0.86Hf0.14O) exhibits more balanced overall performance, including an ultra-low dark current of 11.28 fA, a specific detectivity of 4.21 × 1014 Jones, a short decay time of 90 ms, and a responsivity of 2.74 A W−1 at a bias of 20 V. Moreover, a 32 × 32 photodetector array is fabricated using a 1-inch Ga2O3 thin film, featuring highly uniform distribution of photocurrent and dark current across the pixels and exceptional imaging capabilities. Based on X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis, a viable physical mechanism based on the interfacial electronic structure and the constructed energy band diagram is proposed to interpret the obtained experimental result for the first time.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Journal of Materials Chemistry C HOT Papers

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