Response Speed of Organic Photodiodes as a Function of Incident Optical Intensity

Author:

Saggar Siddhartha12,Mahmood Asad3,Nayak Nagaraj4,Kumar Anil4,Andersson Mats R.5,Philippa Bronson3,Lo Shih‐Chun6ORCID,Namdas Ebinazar B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Organic Photonics & Electronics School of Mathematics and Physics The University of Queensland Brisbane QLD 4072 Australia

2. Current Affiliation: Kurt‐Schwabe‐Institut für Mess‐ und Sensortechnik Meinsberg e.V. 04736 Waldheim Germany

3. College of Science & Engineering James Cook University Cairns QLD 4870 Australia

4. Department of Chemistry Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT‐B) Mumbai Maharashtra 400076 India

5. Flinders Institute for Nanoscale Science & Technology Flinders University Bedford Park SA Adelaide SA 5042 Australia

6. Centre for Organic Photonics & Electronics School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences The University of Queensland Brisbane QLD 4072 Australia

Abstract

AbstractDifferent approaches have been introduced to raise the response speed of bulk heterojunction‐based organic photodiodes (OPDs), with the best‐performing devices now having speeds in the MHz range. In most organic photodiodes, the response speed is commonly assumed to be due to transit time of charge carriers. Upon investigating fluence‐dependent photoresponse of different OPDs, it is found here that bimolecular recombination dictates the response speed at higher fluence levels. Herein, four different organic blend based photodiode systems and their response speed to a range of incident optical fluences are reported. A steep variation in response speed, depending upon the blend system is observed. Using experimental and theoretical studies, the intensity‐dependent response speeds are attributed to differences in the suppressed recombination factor. A high factor enables faster response times in the regime of higher light intensity. This new approach to high‐speed detections has implications for the design of high‐speed organic photodetectors, especially in applications where the speed of the photodetector is most important irrespective of the intensity of the incident signal.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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