Effective separation of photogenerated electron-hole pairs by radial field facilitates ultrahigh photoresponse in single semiconductor nanowire photodetectors
Shaili Sett, Arup Kumar Raychaudhuri

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a strong radial electric field in single semiconductor nanowires effectively separates photogenerated electron-hole pairs, leading to ultrahigh photoresponse, supported by experimental data and a theoretical model.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent theoretical model explaining ultrahigh photoresponse in nanowires due to radial field-induced carrier separation, applicable beyond Ge nanowires.
Findings
Achieved photogain > 10^6 in single Ge nanowires.
Theoretical model predicts inverse relation between diameter and photogain.
Experimental results confirm the model's predictions.
Abstract
We report an investigation on the observation of ultrahigh photoresponse (photogain, G_Pc>106) in single nanowire photodetectors of diameter < 100 nm. The investigation which is a combination of experimental observations and a theoretical analysis of the ultrahigh optical response of semiconductor nanowires, has been carried out with emphasis on Ge nanowires. Semiconductor nanowire photodetectors show a signature of photogating where G_Pc rolls-off with increasing illumination intensity. We show that surface band bending due to depleted surface layers in nanowires induces a strong radial field (~ 108 V/m at the nanowire surface) which causes physical separation of photogenerated electron-hole pairs. This was established quantitatively through a self-consistent theoretical model based on coupled Schrodinger and Poisson Equations. It shows that carrier separation slows down the surface…
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