Investigating the performance of various hole-blocking materials for amorphous selenium-tellurium photodetectors
ORAL
Abstract
The material properties of amorphous selenium (a-Se), which demonstrates low dark currents, the ability to undergo an avalanche process at relatively lower electric fields compared to amorphous silicon, and uniform deposition over large areas, make it a promising semiconductor for X-ray detection and related applications. Additionally, alloying and doping a-Se has been shown to allow for tuning of material properties depending on the target application. In this work, we investigated alloying tellurium with a-Se for the desired application of indirect conversion X-ray detectors. Alloying Te lowers the bandgap of a-Se allowing for increased absorption of green light emitted by scintillating materials commonly used in commercial detectors. However, alloying Te also lowers the resistivity of a-Se, leading to elevated dark currents in a-Se-Te, which we aimed to minimize by adding hole-blocking layers (HBLs). We evaluated the performance of a-Se-Te devices with various HBLs in (1) their ability to suppress dark current and (2) their ability to maintain high conversion efficiencies. We observed that devices with SiO2 and Al2O3
HBLs showed promisingly low dark currents, close to the ideal limit of 10 pA/mm2, while also showing high conversion efficiencies.
HBLs showed promisingly low dark currents, close to the ideal limit of 10 pA/mm2, while also showing high conversion efficiencies.
*This work was supported by the UCSC REU program through the National Science Foundation (Grant # 2349305), and in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of High Energy Physics under Award DE-SC0022343.
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Presenters
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Evan Walls
- University of San Diego