Abstract

AbstractOptoelectronic devices made via spin‐coating of soft materials onto an arbitrary substrate enable ready integration, low cost, and physical flexibility. The use of solution‐processed colloidal quantum dots offers the added advantage of quantum‐size‐effect tuning of material bandgap. Tuning across the near‐ and short‐wavelength infrared (SWIR) spectral regions enables applications in fiber‐optic communications, night vision and biomedical imaging, and efficient solar energy collection. Here we review progress in infrared solar cells, light sensors, and optical sources based on solution‐processed materials. The latest solution‐processed photovoltaics now provide 4.2% power conversion efficiencies in the infrared, placing them a factor of three away from enabling a doubling in overall solar power conversion efficiency of visible‐wavelength solution‐processed photovoltaics. The best solution‐processed photodetectors now provide sensitivities of 1013 Jones D* (normalized detectivity), exceeding the sensitivity of the best epitaxially grown SWIR photodetectors. Infrared optical sources, both broadband light‐emitting diodes and, more recently, lasers, have now also been reported at 1.5 µm.

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