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Improved mid-infrared photoconductors based on colloidal HgTe quantum dots are realized using a hybrid ligand exchange and polar phase transfer. The doping can also be controlled n and p by adjusting the HgCl2 concentration in the ligand exchange process. We compare the photoconductive properties with the prior “solid-state ligand exchange” using ethanedithiol, and we find that the new process affords a ∼100-fold increase of the electron and hole mobility, a ∼100-fold increase in responsivity, and a ∼10-fold increase in detectivity. These photodetector improvements are primarily attributed to the increase in mobility (μ) because the optical properties are mostly unchanged. We show that the specific detectivity (D*) of a photoconductive device is expected to scale as μ. The application potential is further verified by long-term device stability.
Chen et al. (Thu,) studied this question.