Polarization-sensitive perovskite photodetectors are realized by crystallographically aligning 1D perovskite arrays. High-quality inorganic perovskite single crystals with crystallographic order are fabricated by strictly manipulating the dewetting process of organic solution, yielding photodetectors with high photoresponsivity and fast response speed.
Structural engineering in multiple
scales permits the integration
of exotic properties into a single material, which boosts the development
of ultracompact multifunctional devices. Layered perovskites are capable
of cross-linking efficient carrier transport originating from few-layer
perovskite frameworks with extended functionalities contributed by
designable bulky organic cations and nanostructures, thus providing
a platform for multiscale material engineering. Herein, high-performance
Stokes-parameter photodetectors for arbitrary polarized light detection
are realized on the basis of solution-processed chiral-perovskite
nanowire arrays. The chiral ammonium cations intercalated between
the perovskite layers are responsive to circularly polarized light
with a maximum anisotropy factor of 0.15, while the strictly aligned
nanowires with the anisotropic dielectric function result in a large
polarized ratio of 1.6 to linearly polarized light. Single crystallinity
and pure crystallographic orientation permit efficient in-plane carrier
transport along the nanowires, yielding a responsivity of 47.1 A W
–1
and a detectivity of 1.24 × 1013 Jones. By synergy of linear- and circular-polarization response
with high optoelectronic performance for providing sufficient photocurrent
contrasts, Stokes-parameter photodetection is demonstrated on these
nanowires. Our Stokes-parameter photodetectors with a small footprint
and high performances present promising applications toward polarization
imaging.
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