Near-infrared organic photodetectors (NIR OPDs) have attracted considerable attention because of their inherent advantages such as a tailorable light absorption property, low-cost fabrication, compatibility with flexible substrates, and room-temperature operation. In particular, the development of NIR detection between 900 and 950 nm is crucial for noise-free communication in ambient environments. In this work, we demonstrate high-detectivity NIR OPDs at 900-950 nm by employing a non-fullerene acceptor (ITIC) used with an NIR-absorbing conjugated polymer (PNIR) for bulk heterojunction (BHJ), which significantly suppressed dark current. Systemic characterizations including electrical, structural, and morphological analyses revealed that ITIC effectively reduces charge recombination during the operation of the OPDs under NIR illumination, resulting in a dark current reduction and high detectivity of over 3.2 × 1011 Jones at 900-950 nm. The results presented here demonstrate that utilizing a non-fullerene acceptor for BHJ-type NIR OPDs is evidently a strategic approach for the simultaneous achievement of the low dark current and high-detectivity of NIR OPDs.
This work was supported by the Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education (NRF-2018R1D1A1B07047645) and by the NRF grant funded by the Korea government (MSIT) (NRF-2020M3H4A3081822). This work was also supported by the Industrial Strategic Technology Development Program (10077462) by the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) of Korea.