For Immediate Release
June 3, 2012
Contacts: Lee Tune, 301 405 4679 or ltune@umd.edu
UMD Scientists Create Faster, More Sensitive Photodetector by Tricking Graphene
Innovation promises better biochemical weapons detection and body scanners, and new instruments for
studying dark energy & the structure of the universe.
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Electrons in bilayer graphene are heated by a beam of light. Illustration by Loretta Kuo and Michelle Groce, University of Maryland
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Click here larger image. |
COLLEGE PARK, Md. -- Researchers at the Center for Nanophysics and Advanced Materials of the
University of Maryland have developed a new type of hot electron bolometer a sensitive detector of infrared light,
that can be used in a huge range of applications from detection of chemical and biochemical weapons from a
distance and use in security imaging technologies such as airport body scanners, to chemical analysis in the
laboratory and studying the structure of the universe through improved telescopes.
The UMD researchers, led by Research Associate Jun Yan and Professors Michael Fuhrer and Dennis Drew, developed the bolometer using bilayer graphene--two
atomic-thickness sheets of carbon. Due to graphenes unique properties, the bolometer is expected to be sensitive
to a very broad range of light energies, ranging from terahertz frequencies or submillimeter waves through the
infrared to visible light.
The graphene hot electron bolometer is particularly promising as a fast, sensitive, and
low-noise detector of submillimeter waves, which are particularly difficult to detect. Because these photons are
emitted by relatively cool interstellar molecules, submillimeter astronomy studies the early stages of formation
of stars and galaxies by observing these interstellar clouds of molecules. Sensitive detectors of submillimeter
waves are being sought for new observatories that will determine the redshifts and masses of very distant young
galaxies and enable studies of dark energy and the development of structure in the universe.
The Maryland teams findings are published in the June 3 issue of Nature Nanotechnology.
Most photon detectors are based on semiconductors. Semiconductors are materials which have a range of energies
that their electrons are forbidden to occupy, called a band gap. The electrons in a semiconductor can absorb
photons of light having energies greater than the band gap energy, and this property forms the basis of devices
such as photovoltaic cells.
Graphene, a single atom-thick plane of graphite, is unique in that is has a bandgap of
exactly zero energy; graphene can therefore absorb photons of any energy. This property makes graphene
particularly attractive for absorbing very low energy photons (terahertz and infrared) which pass through most
semiconductors. Graphene has another attractive property as a photon absorber: the electrons which absorb the
energy are able to retain it efficiently, rather than losing energy to vibrations of the atoms of the material.
This same property also leads to extremely low electrical resistance in graphene.
University of Maryland researchers exploited these two properties to devise the hot electron bolometer. It
works by measuring the change in the resistance that results from the heating of the electrons as they absorb
light.
Normally, graphenes resistance is almost independent of temperature, unsuitable for a bolometer. So the
Maryland researchers used a special trick: when bilayer graphene is exposed to an electric field it has a small
band gap, large enough that its resistance becomes strongly temperature dependent, but small enough to maintain
its ability to absorb low energy infrared photons.
The researchers found that their bilayer graphene hot electron
bolometer operating at a temperature of 5 Kelvin had comparable sensitivity to existing bolometers operating at
similar temperatures, but was more than a thousand times faster. They extrapolated the performance of the
graphene bolometer to lower temperature and found that it may beat all existing technologies.
Some challenges remain. The bilayer graphene bolometer has a higher electrical resistance than similar devices
using other materials which may make it difficult to use at high frequencies. Additionally, bilayer graphene
absorbs only a few percent of incident light. But the Maryland researchers are working on ways to get around
these difficulties with new device designs, and are confident that a graphene has a bright future as a
photodetecting material.
Science Contact: Dr. Michael S. Fuhrer
Email: mfuhrer@umd.edu
Phone: (301) 405-6143
University of Maryland
12122
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