Herein, the engineering and characterization of a photodetector using reduced graphene oxide gel (femtogel) as an active material are reported for the first time.
We report a significant
improvement in the operational stability
and photosensitivity of an interdigitated photodetector using a hybrid
sensing material based on a reduced graphene oxide gel (femtogel)
and poly methyl methacrylate (PMMA). By coating the reduced graphene
oxide photodetector with a protective layer of PMMA, a noticeable
current stability is achieved, either during a sweep or fixed voltage,
compared to an unprotected photodetector. A bolometric-effect sensing
mechanism was observed in the unprotected photodetector, whereas the
hybrid PMMA/femtogel photodetector displayed a photovoltaic-effect
sensing mechanism. This change in the sensing mechanism of the graphene-based
device, as a result of encapsulating the sensing area using a polymeric
thin layer, is reported for the first time. Moreover, a higher and
reliable sensitivity to the low-power illumination source was observed
in the hybrid PMMA/femtogel photodetector. This study provides an
avenue for engineering the performance and reliability of graphene
oxide photodetectors that operate in an ambient environment in order
to solve the current bottleneck issue, resulting from the lack of
reliability, in commercializing these materials.
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