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Plastic NIR Photodetector Created with Low Bandgap Polymer

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Device achieves an external quantum efficiency that exceeds 38 percent.

Michael A. Greenwood

Although inorganic photodetectors are finding their way into myriad applications, relatively little has been done with their close cousins, polymer-based near-infrared sensors. Despite a range of potentially valuable uses, such as chemical and biological sensing, optical communications, and spectroscopic and medical instrumentation, these organic photodetectors remain hampered by slow speed and high power consumption. The current voltage (I-V) characteristics of a plastic near-IR photodetector were measured in the dark and under 850-nm monochromatic illumination. Reprinted with...Read full article

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    Published: February 2008
    biological sensingCommunicationsenergyinorganic photodetectorspolymer-based near-infrared sensorsResearch & TechnologySensors & Detectors

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