All-Group IV membrane room-temperature mid-infrared photodetector
Mahmoud R. M. Atalla, Simone Assali, Anis Attiaoui, Cedric, Lemieux-Leduc, Aashish Kumar, Salim Abdi, and Oussama Moutanabbir

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates room-temperature broadband mid-infrared photodetectors using fully released GeSn membranes on silicon, achieving a record wavelength cutoff of 4.6 μm and significantly reduced dark current, enabled by strain relaxation engineering.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach of using strain-relaxed GeSn membranes for all-group IV mid-infrared photodetectors with enhanced spectral range and performance.
Findings
Achieved a 4.6 μm wavelength cutoff at room temperature.
Reduced dark current by two orders of magnitude.
Extended absorption deeper into the mid-infrared through membrane release.
Abstract
Strain engineering has been a ubiquitous paradigm to tailor the electronic band structure and harness the associated new or enhanced fundamental properties in semiconductors. In this regard, semiconductor membranes emerged as a versatile class of nanoscale materials to control lattice strain and engineer complex heterostructures leading to the development of a variety of innovative applications. Herein we exploit this quasi-two-dimensional platform to tune simultaneously the lattice parameter and bandgap energy in group IV GeSn semiconductor alloys. As Sn content is increased to reach a direct band gap, these semiconductors become metastable and typically compressively strained. We show that the release and transfer of GeSn membranes lead to a significant relaxation thus extending the absorption wavelength range deeper in the mid-infrared. Fully released GeSn membranes…
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