Advanced Materials Interfaces (Jan 2024)

Lattice Matching Engineering Driven Growth of Large‐Area 2D CeO2 for High‐Performance Photodetection

  • Keyu Chen,
  • Guan Yu Chen,
  • Xinyi Hu,
  • Hao Wu,
  • Mingwei Gu,
  • Yange Luan,
  • Baoyue Zhang,
  • Yihong Hu,
  • Yinfen Cheng,
  • Tao Tang,
  • Haibo Huang,
  • Liguo Chen,
  • Jian Zhen Ou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.202300732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Few rare‐earth (RE) atoms incorporated in lattice greatly tunned the optical, electrical, magnetic, and catalytic performance of doped crystal through the peculiar atomic electron structure of RE. The dimensionality scale‐down of RE oxides can further promote their unique traits and broaden their applications. The UV photodetection performance of (111) oriented CeO2 thin film is limited by the existence of grain boundaries, defects, and strains. Consequently, single‐crystal 2D CeO2 is promising for photodetection as it lacks of grain boundaries and defects. However, the synthesis of large‐sized high‐quality 2D CeO2 with lateral dimensions over 100 µm is challenging. In this work, a 3.9 nm thick CeO2 single crystal with 120 µm lateral size is synthesized over a sapphire substrate through a salt‐assisted chemical vapor deposition method, in which an intermediate insulating CeAlO3 layer is formed between the substrate and 2D CeO2 to enhance the crystal lattice matching and therefore facilitates the large area growth. The photodetector based on 2D CeO2 exhibits a photo response from 395 to 532 nm, possibly ascribed to a micro‐strain narrowed bandgap induced at the heterointerface. The photoresponsivity reaches 43.6 A W−1 while the detectivity reaches 7.58 × 1011 Jones under the 395 nm laser irradiation. Besides, the sub‐ms switching kinetics is achieved without gating bias, which is significantly improved over other reported RE oxides‐based photodetectors. This work demonstrates the possibility of the synthesis of large‐size high‐quality 2D RE oxides and their strong potential in high‐performance optoelectronic devices.

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