Gold-Hyperdoped Germanium with Room-Temperature Sub-Band-Gap Optoelectronic Response
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Gandhi, Hemi
Pastor, David
Tran, Tuan
Kalchmair, Stefan
Smillie, Lachlan
Mailoa, Jonathan P.
Milazzo, Ruggero
Napolitani, E
Loncar, Marco
Williams, Jim
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American Physical Society
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Short-wavelength-infrared (SWIR; 1.4-3.0 micrometre) photodetection is important for various applications. Inducing a low-cost silicon-compatible material, such as germanium, to detect SWIR light would be advantageous for SWIR applications compared with using conventional (III-V or II-VI) SWIR materials. Here, we present a scalable nonequilibrium method for hyperdoping germanium with gold for dopant-mediated SWIR photodetection. Using ion implantation followed by nanosecond pulsed laser melting, we obtain a single-crystal material with a peak gold concentration of 3 × 10^19 cm^-3 (10^3 times the solubility limit). This hyperdoped germanium has fundamentally different optoelectronic properties from those of intrinsic and conventionally doped germanium. This material exhibits sub-band-gap absorption of light up to wavelengths of at least 3 micrometre, with a sub-band-gap optical absorption coefficient comparable to that of commercial SWIR photodetection materials. We show that germanium hyperdoped with gold exhibits sub-band-gap SWIR photodetection at room temperature, in contrast with previous doped-germanium photodetector studies, which only show a low-temperature response. This material is a potential pathway to low-cost room-temperature silicon-compatible SWIR photodetection.
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Physical Review Applied
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