Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) materials present their excellent properties in electronic and optoelectronic applications, including in ultrafast carrier dynamics, layer-dependent energy bandgap, tunable optical properties, low power dissipation, high mobility, transparency, flexibility, and the ability to confine electromagnetic energy to extremely small volumes. Herein, we demonstrate a photodetector with visible to near-infrared detection range, based on the heterojunction fabricated by van der Waals assembly between few-layer black phosphorus (BP) and few-layer molybdenum disulfide (MoS2). The heterojunction with electrical characteristics which can be electrically tuned by a gate voltage achieves a wide range of current-rectifying behavior with a forward-to-reverse bias current ratio exceeding 103. The photoresponsivity (R) of the photodetector is about 22.3 A W–1 measured at λ = 532 nm and 153.4 mA W–1 at λ = 1.55 μm with a microsecond response speed (15 μs). In addition, its specific detectivity D* is calcul...

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