An atomically thin material developed at Rice University may lead to the thinnest-ever imaging platform.
Synthetic two-dimensional materials based on metal chalcogenide
compounds could be the basis for superthin devices, according to Rice
researchers. One such material, molybdenum disulfide, is being widely
studied for its light-detecting properties, but copper indium selenide
(CIS) also shows extraordinary promise.
Sidong Lei, a graduate student in the Rice lab of materials scientist
Pulickel Ajayan, synthesized CIS, a single-layer matrix of copper,
indium and selenium atoms. Lei also built a prototype -- a three-pixel,
charge-coupled device (CCD) -- to prove the material's ability to
capture an image.
The details appear this month in the American Chemical Society journal Nano Letters.
Lei said the optoelectronic memory material could be an important
component in two-dimensional electronics that capture images.
"Traditional CCDs are thick and rigid, and it would not make sense to
combine them with 2-D elements," he said. "CIS-based CCDs would be
ultrathin, transparent and flexible, and are the missing piece for
things like 2-D imaging devices."
The device traps electrons formed when light hits the material and holds them until released for storage, Lei said.
CIS pixels are highly sensitive to light because the trapped
electrons dissipate so slowly, said Robert Vajtai, a senior faculty
fellow in Rice's Department of Materials Science and NanoEngineering.
"There are many two-dimensional materials that can sense light, but none
are as efficient as this material," he said. "This material is 10 times
more efficient than the best we've seen before."
Because the material is transparent, a CIS-based scanner might use
light from one side to illuminate the image on the other for capture.
For medical applications, Lei envisions CIS being combined with other
2-D electronics in tiny bio-imaging devices that monitor real-time
conditions.
In the experiments for the newly reported study, Lei and colleagues
grew synthetic CIS crystals, pulled single-layer sheets from the
crystals and then tested the ability of the layers to capture light. He
said the layer is about two nanometers thick and consists of a
nine-atom-thick lattice. The material may also be grown via chemical
vapor deposition to a size limited only by the size of the furnace, Lei
said.
Because it's flexible, CIS could also be curved to match the focal
surface of an imaging lens system. He said this would allow for the
real-time correction of aberrations and significantly simplify the
entire optical system.
Co-authors of the paper are Rice graduate students Fangfang Wen and
Yongji Gong; postdoctoral researchers Bo Li, Pei Dong, Anthony George
and Liehui Ge; undergraduates Qizhong Wang, James Bellah and Yihan
Huang; complementary appointee Yongmin He of Lanzhou University, China;
Jun Lou, an associate professor of materials science and
nanoengineering, and Naomi Halas, the Stanley C. Moore Professor of
Electrical and Computer Engineering and a professor of chemistry,
biomedical engineering, physics and astronomy and of materials science
and nanoengineering. Ajayan is Rice's Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood
Anderson Professor in Engineering, professor of materials science and
nanoengineering and of chemistry and chair of the Department of
Materials Science and NanoEngineering.
The research was supported by the Army Research Office
Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative, the Function
Accelerated nanoMaterial Engineering Division of the Semiconductor
Technology Advanced Research Network, the Microelectronics Advanced
Research Association, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, the Robert A. Welch
Foundation, the National Security Science and Engineering Faculty
Fellowship and the Office of Naval Research.
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