PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Broadband photodetector material integrating day-night recognition and distance measurement

Overcoming the limitations of wet processes that damage lithium surfaces and induce dendrites, the research team implemented a stable interfacial layer through a solvent-free transfer printing process

2025-09-24
(Press-News.org) A research team in South Korea has developed a next-generation sensor material capable of integrating the detection of multiple light wavelengths.

A joint research team led by Dr. Wooseok Song at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT) and Professor Dae Ho Yoon at Sungkyunkwan University successfully developed a new broadband photodetector material that can sense a wider range of wavelengths compared to existing commercial materials, and achieved cost-effective synthesis on a 6-inch wafer-scale substrate.

Photodetectors are typically divided into different categories depending on the wavelength range they detect, serving applications in smart devices, security, environmental monitoring, and healthcare. Until now, separate sensors for visible, near-infrared (NIR), mid-infrared (MWIR), and long-wave infrared (LWIR) were required. For example, autonomous vehicles or military drones needed to mount multiple sensors for different functions. Broadband photodetectors, however, integrate multiple wavelength ranges into a single sensor. Conventional broadband sensors based on two-dimensional (2D) materials could only detect from visible to NIR wavelengths, while MWIR and LWIR detection was limited, and their poor stability under humidity and temperature variations hindered outdoor or defense applications.

The newly developed broadband photodetector material detects the full spectrum from visible to LWIR and maintains stability even under high-temperature and high-humidity conditions. This allows product designs to be simplified and production costs reduced by replacing multiple sensors with a single integrated device. For instance, an autonomous vehicle or military drone could integrate visible-light sensors (for daytime imaging and recognition), NIR sensors such as LiDAR (for distance measurement), and MWIR/LWIR sensors (for night-time human detection) into one.

The team utilized a topological crystalline insulator (SnSe₀.₉Te₀.₁), derived from the 2D semiconductor tin selenide (SnSe) with tellurium (Te) substitution. As a quantum material, TCIs exhibit a narrow band gap, enabling detection of long-wavelength light such as MWIR and LWIR, while also maintaining high stability. Unlike conventional 2D semiconductors that cannot detect low-energy photons due to a wide band gap, the TCI structure allows electrons to move freely on the surface states, enabling broadband and highly sensitive detection—including subtle LWIR thermal radiation such as that emitted by human fingers.

As a result, this new material achieves broadband detection over an ~8× wider range (0.5–9.6 μm), compared to conventional 2D semiconductors (0.4–1.2 μm). It is also thin, lightweight, and highly stable under high temperature, humidity, and even underwater conditions.

Another key advantage is the simplified and low-cost fabrication process. While traditional TCI synthesis required expensive ultra-high-vacuum equipment such as molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), the research team designed SnSe₀.₉Te₀.₁ to retain topological properties while being less sensitive, enabling cost-efficient solution-based thermal decomposition synthesis. This allowed uniform production on a palm-sized 6-inch wafer, which is compatible with existing semiconductor processes, making it favorable for large-scale manufacturing.

The team is now extending this technology to 8-inch or larger wafers and integrating sensor arrays and circuits to develop complete sensor modules.

Dr. Wooseok Song explained, “This sensor can cover applications ranging from autonomous vehicles and military drones to smartwatches and home IoT security systems.”

KRICT President Young-Kuk Lee emphasized, “This breakthrough will mark a turning point in replacing expensive imported broadband sensors and usher in an era of high-performance, domestically produced broadband sensors.”

This research was published in ACS Nano (Impact Factor: 16.0) in July 2025. Dr. Wooseok Song (KRICT) and Professor Dae Ho Yoon (Sungkyunkwan University) served as corresponding authors, with Do Hyung Lee and Hyeong-Ku Jo of KRICT as first authors.

 

###

KRICT is a non-profit research institute funded by the Korean government. Since its foundation in 1976, KRICT has played a leading role in advancing national chemical technologies in the fields of chemistry, material science, environmental science, and chemical engineering. Now, KRICT is moving forward to become a globally leading research institute tackling the most challenging issues in the field of Chemistry and Engineering and will continue to fulfill its role in developing chemical technologies that benefit the entire world and contribute to maintaining a healthy planet. More detailed information on KRICT can be found at https://www.krict.re.kr/eng/

The study was supported KRICT’s Basic Research Program and the Nano/Materials Technology Development Program of the National Research Foundation of Korea, funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New peer-reviewed EWG study finds eating some produce hikes pesticide levels in people

2025-09-24
WASHINGTON – Consuming some types of fruits and vegetables can increase the levels of harmful pesticides detected in people’s bodies, according to a new peer-reviewed study by Environmental Working Group scientists. Pesticides have been linked to cancer, reproductive harm, hormone disruption and neurotoxicity in children. Residues of these chemicals are often detected on produce, creating exposure concerns for consumers. The new study may help inform future research into how dietary exposure to pesticides through fruit and vegetables might affect human health. “The findings reinforce that what we eat directly affects the level of pesticides ...

Family Heart Foundation announces recommendations to improve universal screening for underdiagnosed genetic condition in children, which causes early onset cardiovascular disease

2025-09-24
The Family Heart Foundation, a leading research and advocacy organization, announced the online publication of recommendations from a multidisciplinary panel in the Journal of Pediatrics to promote the early identification of children living with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). A common life-threatening genetic condition that causes high cholesterol from birth, FH can lead to premature heart attacks and heart disease, if it is not diagnosed until adulthood. Despite national guidelines established in 2011 by the National Heart, Lung and Blood ...

Gut bacteria linked to how our genes switch on and off, UH research finds

2025-09-24
The trillions of microbes that live in the human gut may play a bigger role in health than previously thought, according to a new research by the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. The article, published in September 2025 in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences, explores how gut bacteria interact with human genes in ways that could shape disease risk, aging and even future medical treatments. The review highlights how the gut microbiome (the collection of bacteria, viruses and fungi that live in the digestive system) can affect epigenetics, the process that turns genes on or off without changing the DNA itself. These changes happen through chemical tags ...

Longer body size means more female calves for baleen whale moms

2025-09-24
Long baleen whale mothers are more likely to have female calves than males, according to a new study led by the University of Washington. The findings contradict a popular evolutionary theory postulating that strong mammals benefit more from birthing males.  In 1973, Robert Trivers and Dan Willard proposed that fit female mammals can improve their odds for grandchildren by having males. Large strong mothers will raise large strong calves that can outcompete other males for mates. But, according to the theory, female fitness is less consequential. The studies backing this argument focused ...

From trash to treasure: Indonesian scientists turn plastic bags into glowing water sensors

2025-09-24
What if we told you that the plastic shopping bag from last week’s grocery run could one day help detect toxic metals in drinking water? Sounds like science fiction? Think again. A dazzling new breakthrough led by Dr. Indriana Kartini from the Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, Indonesia, is doing exactly that—turning plastic waste into glowing nanomaterials that can sense pollution in water. And yes, it’s as cool as it sounds. The Plastic Problem, Reimagined Every year, millions of tons of plastic bags pollute our oceans, clog landfills, and linger in ecosystems for centuries. But what if this stubborn ...

Distribution of fat could influence cancer risk, study suggests

2025-09-24
How fat is distributed in people’s bodies could make a difference to their risk of certain cancers, according to new research led by the University of Bristol.  The international study is published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute (JNCI) today [24 September]. Scientists have already shown that having obesity increases a person’s risk of developing certain cancers. Obesity is usually measured using body mass index (BMI), but growing evidence – particularly from heart health research – suggests that BMI ...

Screening approach enhances CRISPR genome-editing efficiency

2025-09-23
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – September 23, 2025) Natural systems such as CRISPR-associated transposons (CASTs) offer a targetable, one-step way to edit genomes. However, adapting them for biomedical applications has been challenging. To address this limitation, scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital designed a screening approach to measure efficiency and specificity for thousands of CAST variants accurately. This high-throughput approach allowed the researchers to rapidly optimize promising candidate ...

Drinking any amount of alcohol likely increases dementia risk

2025-09-23
Drinking any amount of alcohol likely increases the risk of dementia, suggests the largest combined observational and genetic study to date, published online in BMJ Evidence Based Medicine. Even light drinking—generally thought to be protective, based on observational studies—is unlikely to lower the risk, which rises in tandem with the quantity of alcohol consumed, the research indicates. Current thinking suggests that there might be an ‘optimal dose’ of alcohol for brain health, but most of these studies have focused on older people and/or didn’t differentiate between former and lifelong non-drinkers, complicating efforts ...

BMJ Group retracts trial on apple cider vinegar and weight loss

2025-09-23
BMJ Group has retracted research suggesting that small daily quantities of apple cider vinegar might help people who are overweight or obese to lose weight. The small clinical trial was published in the open access journal BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health in March 2024 and its findings press released. The study findings generated widespread international attention at the time, and continue to be frequently referred to in media coverage. The retraction was prompted by concerns raised about the quality of the work, ...

Significant rise in use of low/alcohol-free drinks among ‘risky’ UK drinkers in past 5 years

2025-09-23
There’s been a significant rise in the use of low and alcohol-free drinks to curb alcohol intake among ‘risky drinkers’ over the past 5 years in England, Wales, and Scotland, finds research published in the open access journal BMJ Public Health. The proportion of those using them to make serious attempts to cut down their alcohol intake rose from 35% in 2020 to 44% in 2024, while those using them in any attempt to cut down increased from 26% to 39%. The trends were especially noticeable ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Piecing together the puzzle of future solar cell materials

Supercritical subsurface fluids open a window into the world

Universal drug target potential in scaffolding cells found across the body

Early symptoms of MS same across ethnic and social groups – study

5G is deployed, but it doesn’t always deliver faster connections than 4G

Visualization of blood flow sharpens artificial heart

Magic mushrooms invent active compound twice

Broadband photodetector material integrating day-night recognition and distance measurement

New peer-reviewed EWG study finds eating some produce hikes pesticide levels in people

Family Heart Foundation announces recommendations to improve universal screening for underdiagnosed genetic condition in children, which causes early onset cardiovascular disease

Gut bacteria linked to how our genes switch on and off, UH research finds

Longer body size means more female calves for baleen whale moms

From trash to treasure: Indonesian scientists turn plastic bags into glowing water sensors

Distribution of fat could influence cancer risk, study suggests

Screening approach enhances CRISPR genome-editing efficiency

Drinking any amount of alcohol likely increases dementia risk

BMJ Group retracts trial on apple cider vinegar and weight loss

Significant rise in use of low/alcohol-free drinks among ‘risky’ UK drinkers in past 5 years

Regular exercise ‘rewires’ heart-control nerves differently on left and right side, study finds

Centenary of the birth of IVF pioneer Sir Robert Edwards

New multi-registry study highlights ocrelizumab’s superior relapse control in multiple sclerosis

Wonhwa Cho to receive Biophysical Society’s 2026 Award in the Biophysics of Health and Disease

Future generations: NSF-funded project explores how nanoplastics are transmitted to offspring

Erdinc Sezgin to receive 2026 Early Independent Career Award

Charles L. Brooks III to receive 2026 Klaus Schulten and Zaida Luthey-Schulten Computational Biophysics Lecture Award

Jie Xiao to receive 2026 Carolyn Cohen Innovation Award

Elizabeth Hinde and Jorge Alegre-Cebollada to receive 2026 Michael and Kate Bárány Award

Nuria Assa-Munt to receive 2026 Rosalba Kampman Distinguished Service Award

Yifan Cheng to receive 2026 Anatrace Membrane Protein Award

A. Joshua Wand to receive the 2026 Ignacio Tinoco Award

[Press-News.org] Broadband photodetector material integrating day-night recognition and distance measurement
Overcoming the limitations of wet processes that damage lithium surfaces and induce dendrites, the research team implemented a stable interfacial layer through a solvent-free transfer printing process