TY - JOUR
T1 - Bionic Scotopic Adaptation Transistors for Nighttime Low Illumination Imaging
AU - Luo, Xiangkai
AU - Deng, Wei
AU - Sheng, Fangming
AU - Ren, Xiaobin
AU - Zhao, Zishen
AU - Zhao, Chun
AU - Liu, Yang
AU - Shi, Jialin
AU - Liu, Zeke
AU - Zhang, Xiujuan
AU - Jie, Jiansheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/5/28
Y1 - 2024/5/28
N2 - Human vision excels in perceiving nighttime low illumination due to biological feedforward adaptation. Replicating this ability in biomimetic vision using solid-state devices has been highly sought after. However, emulating scotopic adaptation, entailing a confluence of efficient photoexcitation and dynamic carrier modulation, presents formidable challenges. Here, we demonstrate a low-power and bionic scotopic adaptation transistor by coupling a light-absorption layer and an electron-trapping layer at the bottom of the semiconducting channel, enabling simultaneous achievement of efficient generation of free photocarriers and adaptive carrier accumulation within a single device. This innovation empowers our transistor to exhibit sensitivity-potentiated characteristics after adaptation, detecting scotopic-level illumination (0.001 lx) with exceptional photosensitivity up to 103 at low voltages below 2 V. Moreover, we have successfully replicated diverse scotopic vision functions, encompassing time-dependent visual threshold enhancement, light intensity-dependent adaptation index, imaging contrast enhancement for nighttime low illumination imaging, opening an opportunity for artificial night vision.
AB - Human vision excels in perceiving nighttime low illumination due to biological feedforward adaptation. Replicating this ability in biomimetic vision using solid-state devices has been highly sought after. However, emulating scotopic adaptation, entailing a confluence of efficient photoexcitation and dynamic carrier modulation, presents formidable challenges. Here, we demonstrate a low-power and bionic scotopic adaptation transistor by coupling a light-absorption layer and an electron-trapping layer at the bottom of the semiconducting channel, enabling simultaneous achievement of efficient generation of free photocarriers and adaptive carrier accumulation within a single device. This innovation empowers our transistor to exhibit sensitivity-potentiated characteristics after adaptation, detecting scotopic-level illumination (0.001 lx) with exceptional photosensitivity up to 103 at low voltages below 2 V. Moreover, we have successfully replicated diverse scotopic vision functions, encompassing time-dependent visual threshold enhancement, light intensity-dependent adaptation index, imaging contrast enhancement for nighttime low illumination imaging, opening an opportunity for artificial night vision.
KW - bionic sensors
KW - imaging
KW - organic semiconductors
KW - organic transistors
KW - scotopic adaptation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193638412&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.4c01663
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.4c01663
M3 - Article
C2 - 38742941
AN - SCOPUS:85193638412
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 18
SP - 13726
EP - 13737
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 21
ER -