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Infrared Imaging using thermally stable HgTe/CdS nanocrystals

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arxiv 2402.13745 v1 pith:T22LH5QO submitted 2024-02-21 physics.app-ph cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Infrared Imaging using thermally stable HgTe/CdS nanocrystals

classification physics.app-ph cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords energyfavorshgteinfrarednanocrystalsparticlesreducedaggregates
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Transferring the nanocrystals (NCs) from the laboratory environment toward practical applications has raised new challenges. In the case of NCs for display and lightning, the focus was on reduced Auger recombination and maintaining luminescence at high temperatures. When it comes to infrared sensing, narrow band gap materials are required and HgTe appears as the most spectrally tunable platform. Its low-temperature synthesis reduces the growth energy cost yet also favors sintering. As a result, once coupled to a read-out circuit, the Joule effect aggregates the particles leading to a poorly defined optical edge and dramatically large dark current. Here, we demonstrate that CdS shells bring the expected thermal stability (no redshift upon annealing, reduced tendency to form amalgams and preservation of photoconduction after an atomic layer deposition process). The peculiar electronic structure of these confined particles is unveiled using k.p self-consistent simulations showing a significant exciton biding energy at around 200 meV. After shelling, the material displays a p-type behavior that favors the generation of photoconductive gain. The latter is then used to increase the external quantum

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