HgTe colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are appealing candidates for infrared photodetection due to their facile tuning of infrared absorption, solution-processability and compatibility with silicon electronics for imaging. Traditional HgTe CQD synthesis suffers from CQD aggregation or air-sensitive tellurium (Te) precursor. Here, monodisperse HgTe CQDs with sharp excitonic absorption edge and tunable response from 1.7 μm to 6.3 μm are synthesized via a ligand-engineered approach. Thanks to their accessible CQD surface, both the carrier concentration and polarity can be readily tuned by ligand-induced surface gating. The transport property studies present a record electron mobility up to 18 cm2 V-1 s-1. Short wave infrared photodetectors achieve a high room-temperature detectivity beyond 1011 Jones at the wavelength of 1550 nm. The synthesis strategy is expected to enrich the applications of HgTe CQDs and promote the fast development of CQD infrared detection technology.
We report an integrated fiber-optic detector by dip coating PbS colloidal quantum dots onto a pretreated specialty fiber. We measured the readout current at 1550nm as a function of the optical power, the bias voltage and the distance between the contact electrodes.
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