“…Furthermore, some emerging visible light absorption materials, such as perovskite and transition metal halides, still face problems such as poor device performance stability and repeatability and slow response speed, which seriously restrict the application of visible light PDs. , Alternatively, InGaN is an ideal candidate material due to its tunable bandgap (0.7 eV-3.4 eV) that could achieve wavelength-selective absorption by regulating the In component. Many InGaN-based visible-light PDs have been subsequently invented and constructed toward the development trend of high responsivity and high speed in the past decade, such as InGaN/graphene heterojunction PDs, Si/SiN x /InGaN heterojunction PDs, and Si/AlN/InGaN heterojunction PDs. − Among these, 1D nanowires (NWs) exhibit the advantages of the direct conduction path of nanowire materials can effectively improve the carrier separation ability, and the large specific surface volume ratio improves light absorption. , Wang et al proposed an n-InGaN/p-Cu 2 O core–shell nanowire-based photoelectrochemical photodetector, and the responsivity and response times were up to 0.8 mA/W and 40.8/32.5 ms, respectively, under one-sun illumination . However, the higher responsivity and faster response speed of InGaN NR based PDs were limited due to the larger surface states, which would capture photogeneration carriers.…”