scholarly journals Silicon: quantum dot photovoltage triodes

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Zhou ◽  
Li Zheng ◽  
Zhijun Ning ◽  
Xinhong Cheng ◽  
Fang Wang ◽  
...  

AbstractSilicon is widespread in modern electronics, but its electronic bandgap prevents the detection of infrared radiation at wavelengths above 1,100 nanometers, which limits its applications in multiple fields such as night vision, health monitoring and space navigation systems. It is therefore of interest to integrate silicon with infrared-sensitive materials to broaden its detection wavelength. Here we demonstrate a photovoltage triode that can use silicon as the emitter but is also sensitive to infrared spectra owing to the heterointegrated quantum dot light absorber. The photovoltage generated at the quantum dot base region, attracting holes from silicon, leads to high responsivity (exceeding 410 A·W−1 with Vbias of −1.5 V), and a widely self-tunable spectral response. Our device has the maximal specific detectivity (4.73 × 1013 Jones with Vbias of −0.4 V) at 1,550 nm among the infrared sensitized silicon detectors, which opens a new path towards infrared and visible imaging in one chip with silicon technology compatibility.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (7) ◽  
pp. 231-1-231-7
Author(s):  
Antonio de la Calle-Martos ◽  
Rubén Gómez-Merchán ◽  
Juan Antonio Leñero-Bardallo ◽  
ángel Rodríguez-Vázquez

We report a sun tracker sensor for attitude control of space navigation systems. The sensor exploits the concept of asynchronous operation previously devised by the authors for those devices. Asynchronous luminance sensors optimize sun trackers operation because only illuminated pixels are readout and can transmit data. This approach outperforms classic frame-based sun trackers in terms of bandwidth consumption, latency, and power consumption. The new sensor under study has been optimized for operation and interaction with other attitude control systems when it is embarked. The sensor power consumption is quite reduced. To save power, its pixels enter automatically in standby mode after gauging illumination levels. The device operates with only 0.45V. The pixel matrix has been devised to optionally be directly powered by energy harvesting systems based on photovoltaic diodes connected to a storage capacitor without a DC-DC converter.


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