Multiple exciton generation (MEG) in semiconductors that yields two or more excitons by absorbing one high-energy photon has been proposed to break the Shockley-Queisser limit and boost photon-to-electron conversion efficiency.… Click to show full abstract
Multiple exciton generation (MEG) in semiconductors that yields two or more excitons by absorbing one high-energy photon has been proposed to break the Shockley-Queisser limit and boost photon-to-electron conversion efficiency. However, MEG performance in conventional bulk semiconductors or later colloidal nanocrystals is far from satisfactory. Here, we report efficient MEG in few-layer black phosphorus (BP), a direct narrow bandgap two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor with layer-tunable properties. MEG performance improves with decreasing layer number and reaches 2.09Eg threshold and 93% efficiency for two-layer BP, approaching energy conservation limit. The enhanced MEG can be attributed to strong Coulomb interaction and high density of states in 2D materials. Furthermore, MEG of BP shows negligible degradation in vertical heterostructure and multielectron can be extracted by interfacial transfer with near unity yield. These results suggest 2D semiconductors as an ideal system for next generation highly efficient light emission and charge transfer devices.
               
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