283 research outputs found

    Asymmetrically Encapsulated vertical ITO/MoS2/Cu2O photodetector with ultra-high sensitivity

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    Strong light absorption, coupled with moderate carrier transport properties, makes two-dimensional (2-D) layered transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors promising candidates for low intensity photodetection applications. However, the performance of these devices is severely bottlenecked by slow response with persistent photocurrent due to long lived charge trapping, and nonreliable characteristics due to undesirable ambience and substrate effects. Here we demonstrate ultra-high specific detectivity (D*) of 3.2x10^14 Jones and responsivity (R) of 5.77x10^4 AW-1 at an optical power density (P_op) of 0.26 Wm-2 and external bias (V_ext) of -0.5 V in an indium tin oxide (ITO)/MoS2/copper oxide (Cu2O)/Au vertical multi-heterojunction photodetector exhibiting small carrier transit time. The active MoS2 layer being encapsulated by carrier collection layers allows us to achieve negligible trap assisted persistent photocurrent and repeatable characteristics over large number of cycles. We also achieved a large D*>10^14 Jones at zero external bias due to the built-in field of the asymmetric photodetector. Benchmarking the performance against existing reports in literature shows a pathway for achieving reliable and highly sensitive photodetectors for ultra-low intensity photodetection applications.Comment: Accepted in Small, Wile

    Valley Coherent Hot Carriers and Thermal Relaxation in Monolayer Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

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    We show room temperature valley coherence with in MoS2, MoSe2, WS2 and WSe2 monolayers using linear polarization resolved hot photoluminescence (PL), at energies close to the excitation - demonstrating preservation of valley coherence before sufficient scattering events. The features of the co-polarized hot luminescence allow us to extract the lower bound of the binding energy of the A exciton in monolayer MoS2 as 0.42 (+/- 0.02) eV. The broadening of the PL peak is found to be dominated by Boltzmann-type hot luminescence tail, and using the slope of the exponential decay, the carrier temperature is extracted in-situ at different stages of energy relaxation. The temperature of the emitted optical phonons during the relaxation process are probed by exploiting the corresponding broadening of the Raman peaks due to temperature induced anharmonic effects. The findings provide a physical picture of photo-generation of valley coherent hot carriers, and their subsequent energy relaxation path ways

    Adaptive output feedback control of aircraft flexible modes

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    The application of adaptive output feedback augmentative control to the flexible aircraft problem is presented. Experimental validation of control scheme was carried out using a three disk torsional pendulum. In the reference model adaptive control scheme, the rigid aircraft reference model and neural network adaptation is used to control structural flexible modes and compensate for the effects unmodeled dynamics and parametric variations of a classical high order large passenger aircraft. The attenuation of specific low and high frequency flexible mode depending on linear controller design specifications and adaptation parameters were observed. The effectiveness of the approach was seen in flexibility control of the high dimensional, nonminimum phase, nonlinear aircraft model with parametric uncertainties of wind and unmodeled dynamics of actuators and sensors

    A Changing Landscape:On Safety & Open Source in Automated and Connected Driving

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    Direct observation of giant binding energy modulation of exciton complexes in monolayer MoSe2_2

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    Screening due to surrounding dielectric medium reshapes the electron-hole interaction potential and plays a pivotal role in deciding the binding energies of strongly bound exciton complexes in quantum confined monolayers of transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs). However, owing to strong quasi-particle bandgap renormalization in such systems, a direct quantification of estimated shifts in binding energy in different dielectric media remains elusive using optical studies. In this work, by changing the dielectric environment, we show a conspicuous photoluminescence (PL) peak shift at low temperature for higher energy excitons (2s, 3s, 4s, 5s) in monolayer MoSe2_2, while the 1s exciton peak position remains unaltered - a direct evidence of varying compensation between screening induced exciton binding energy modulation and quasi-particle bandgap renormalization. The estimated modulation of binding energy for the 1s exciton is found to be 58.6% (70.5% for 2s, 78.9% for 3s, 85% for 4s) by coating an Al2_2O3_3 layer on top, while the corresponding reduction in quasi-particle bandgap is estimated to be 248 meV. Such a direct evidence of large tunability of the binding energy of exciton complexes as well as the bandgap in monolayer TMDs holds promise of novel device applications.Comment: 19 pages including supplemental informatio

    A Changing Landscape:On Safety & Open Source in Automated and Connected Driving

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