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Autores principales: Wang, Yicheng, Jing, Jixiang, Luo, Yumeng, Wang, Xiaomin, Liang, Kuan, Chen, Changsheng, Ki, Dong-Keun, Zhu, Ye, Wang, Zhongqiang, Wang, Qi, Li, Kwai Hei, Chu, Zhiqin
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.13909
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author Wang, Yicheng
Jing, Jixiang
Luo, Yumeng
Wang, Xiaomin
Liang, Kuan
Chen, Changsheng
Ki, Dong-Keun
Zhu, Ye
Wang, Zhongqiang
Wang, Qi
Li, Kwai Hei
Chu, Zhiqin
author_facet Wang, Yicheng
Jing, Jixiang
Luo, Yumeng
Wang, Xiaomin
Liang, Kuan
Chen, Changsheng
Ki, Dong-Keun
Zhu, Ye
Wang, Zhongqiang
Wang, Qi
Li, Kwai Hei
Chu, Zhiqin
contents The escalating demand for ultraviolet (UV) sensing in space exploration, environmental monitoring, and agricultural productivity necessitates detectors that are both environmentally and mechanically resilient. Diamond, featuring its high bandgap and UV absorption, exceptional mechanical/chemical robustness, and excellent thermal stability, emerges as a highly promising material for next-generation UV detection in various scenarios. However, conventional diamond-based UV detectors are constrained by rigid bulk architectures and reliance on external power supplies, hindering their integration with curved and flexible platforms and complicating device scalability due to auxiliary power requirements. To tackle these challenges, herein, we firstly demonstrated a large-scale, self-powered, and flexible diamond UV detector by heterogeneously integrating a MoS$_2$ monolayer with an ultrathin, freestanding diamond membrane. The fabricated device operates at zero external bias, and simultaneously exhibits a high responsivity of 94 mA W$^{-1}$ at 220 nm, and detectivity of 5.88 x 109 Jones. Notably, mechanical bending enables strain-induced bandgap modulation of the diamond membrane, allowing dynamically tunable photoresponse-a capability absent in rigid diamond counterparts. To validate its practicality and scalability, a proof-of-concept UV imager with 3x3 pixels was demonstrated. This newly developed configuration will undoubtedly open up new routes toward scalable, integrable, flexible, and cost-effective UV sensing solutions for emerging technologies
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_13909
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Self-Powered, Ultra-thin, Flexible, and Scalable Ultraviolet Detector Utilizing Diamond-MoS$_2$ Heterojunction
Wang, Yicheng
Jing, Jixiang
Luo, Yumeng
Wang, Xiaomin
Liang, Kuan
Chen, Changsheng
Ki, Dong-Keun
Zhu, Ye
Wang, Zhongqiang
Wang, Qi
Li, Kwai Hei
Chu, Zhiqin
Instrumentation and Detectors
The escalating demand for ultraviolet (UV) sensing in space exploration, environmental monitoring, and agricultural productivity necessitates detectors that are both environmentally and mechanically resilient. Diamond, featuring its high bandgap and UV absorption, exceptional mechanical/chemical robustness, and excellent thermal stability, emerges as a highly promising material for next-generation UV detection in various scenarios. However, conventional diamond-based UV detectors are constrained by rigid bulk architectures and reliance on external power supplies, hindering their integration with curved and flexible platforms and complicating device scalability due to auxiliary power requirements. To tackle these challenges, herein, we firstly demonstrated a large-scale, self-powered, and flexible diamond UV detector by heterogeneously integrating a MoS$_2$ monolayer with an ultrathin, freestanding diamond membrane. The fabricated device operates at zero external bias, and simultaneously exhibits a high responsivity of 94 mA W$^{-1}$ at 220 nm, and detectivity of 5.88 x 109 Jones. Notably, mechanical bending enables strain-induced bandgap modulation of the diamond membrane, allowing dynamically tunable photoresponse-a capability absent in rigid diamond counterparts. To validate its practicality and scalability, a proof-of-concept UV imager with 3x3 pixels was demonstrated. This newly developed configuration will undoubtedly open up new routes toward scalable, integrable, flexible, and cost-effective UV sensing solutions for emerging technologies
title Self-Powered, Ultra-thin, Flexible, and Scalable Ultraviolet Detector Utilizing Diamond-MoS$_2$ Heterojunction
topic Instrumentation and Detectors
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.13909