Chap6 Photodetectors
Chap6 Photodetectors
Chap6 Photodetectors
Photodetectors
Principle of the p-n junction Photodiode
E (x )
The field in the depletion region. x
E
max
Principle of pn junction photodiode
Vr
h> Eg
photodiode. h+ e–
n
• Annular electrode to allow photon E
Antireflection Electrode
to enter the device. coating
W Depletion region
net
• Antireflection coating (Si3N4) to (b )
eNd
reduce the reflection. x
E (x)
within SCL. (c )
x
• (c) The E field across depletion
region. E max
A generic photodiode.
Photodetectors
Principle of the p-n junction Photodiode
An EHP is photogenerated at x = l. The electron and the hole drift in opposite directions with
drift velocities vh and ve.
The electron arrives at time telectron = (L-l )/ve and the hole arrives at time thole = l/vh.
V
Iphoto(t)
e vh e vh e ve
0 L L L
iphoto(t)
Semiconductor
Area = Charge = e
e- E telectron
h+
vhole velectron thole
l L-l t
0 l L 0 evh /L eve /L
x i (t)
h+ e–
telectron ielectron(t)
e ve e vh
i e t ; t te i h t ; t th Photocurrent
L L
te th The collected charge is not
Qcollected ie t dt ih t dt e 2e but just “one electron”.
0 0
If a charge q is being drifted with a velocity vd(t) by a field between two biased
electrodes separated by L, the motion of q generates an external current
given by
e v d t
i (t ) ; t t transit Ramo’s Theorem
L
Photodetectors
Absorption Coefficient and Photodiode Materials
Absorbed Photon create Electron-Hole Pair.
I ( x ) I 0 e x Absorption coefficient
Absorption Coefficient
Photon energy (eV)
• Absorption 5 4 3 2 1
0.9 0.8 0.7
1108
coefficient α is a
material property. 1107
Ge In0.7Ga0.3As0.64P0.36
• Most of the photon In0.53Ga0.47As
Si
absorption (63%) 1106
GaAs
occurs over a (m-1)
InP
distance 1/α (it is 1105
a-Si:H
called penetration
depth δ) 1104
1103
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8
Wavelength ( m)
Absorption coefficient ( ) vs. wavelength ( ) for various semiconductors
(Data selectively collected and combined from various sources.)
Figure 5.3
13
Photodetectors
Absorption Coefficient and Photodiode Materials
Absorption
The indirect-gap materials are shown with a broken line.
Photon energy (eV)
54 3 2 1 0.9 0.8 0.7
8
1´ 10
7 Ge In0.7Ga0.3As0.64P0.36
1´ 10
Absorption Coefficient a (m-1)
Si In0.53Ga0.47As
6
1´ 10
GaAs
InP
5
1´ 10
a-Si:H
4
1´ 10
3
1´ 10
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8
Wavelength (mm)
Absorption Coefficient
E E
• Direct bandgap semiconductors CB
c
E Photon
not require assistant from lattice v
VB
E v
–k k –k k
and the electron is excited directly (a) GaAs (Direct bandgap) (b) Si (Indirect bandgap)
from the VB to CB without a change
in its k-vector (crystal momentum (a)in anPhoton absorption in a direct bandgap semiconductor. (b) Photon absorption
indirect bandgap semiconductor (VB, valence band; CB, conduction band)
ħk), since photon momentum is very © 1999 S.O. Kasap, Optoelectronics (Prentice Hall)
small.
k CB k VB photon momentum 0
Absorption coefficient α for direct bandgap semiconductors
rise sharply with decreasing wavelength from λg (GaAs and
InP). 15
Absorption Coefficient
E E
• Indirect bandgap CB
c
E Photon
assistant from lattice vibrations v
VB
E v
k –k k
of lattice wave, then ħK (a) GaAs (Direct bandgap) (b) Si (Indirect bandgap)
represents the momentum
associated with lattice vibration(a)in anPhoton absorption in a direct bandgap semiconductor. (b) Photon absorption
indirect bandgap semiconductor (VB, valence band; CB, conduction band)
ħK is a phonon momentum.© 1999 S.O. Kasap, Optoelectronics (Prentice Hall)
k CB k VB phonon momentum K
Thus the probability of photon absorption is not as high as in a
direct transition and the λg is not as sharp as for direct bandgap
semiconductors.
16
Photodetectors
Absorption Coefficient and Photodiode Materials
E E
CB
EC Indirect Bandgap
CB
Direct Bandgap Eg Photon Eg
EC
EV Photon
EV
VB
VB Phonons
–k k –k k
Photodetectors
Quantum Efficiency and Responsivity
External Quantum Efficiency
Responsivity
Photocurre nt (A) I ph
R
Incident Optical Power (W) P0
e e
R Spectral Responsivity
h hc
Photodetectors
1
0.9
Responsivity (A/W)
0.6
0.5
0.4 lg
0.3 Si Photodiode
0.2
0.1
0
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200
Wavelength (nm)
The pin Photodiode E le c tr o d e
SiO 2
p+
E le c tr o d e
drawbacks: n et
Eo
limitation). W
20
Photodetectors
The pin Photodiode
E0
i-Si n+
W
rnet hu > Eg E
eNd
h+ e
–
x
Iph
R Vout
–eNa
Vr
p+ i-Si
Diffusion
hu > Eg e– E
Drift
h+
l W
Vr
Photodetectors
The pin Photodiode
p-i-n diode
(a) The structure;
Vr Vr W
E E0 t drift
W W vd
v d d E
The speed of pin photodiodes are invariably limited by the transit time of
photogenerated carriers across the i-Si layer.
For i-Si layer of width 10 m, the drift time is about is about 0.1 nsec.
Photodetectors
The pin Photodiode
Drift velocity vs. electric field for holes and electrons in Silicon.
105
Drift velocity (m sec-1)
Electron
104
Hole
103
102
104 105 106 107
Electric field (V m-1)
Example
Bandgap and photodetection
(a) Determine the maximum value of the energy gap which a semiconductor, used as a
photoconductor, can have if it is to be sensitive to yellow light (600 nm).
(b) A photodetector whose area is 510-2 cm2 is irradiated with yellow light whose
intensity is 20 mW cm-2. Assuming that each photon generates one electron-hole
pair, calculate the number of pairs generated per second.
Solution
Solution
(c) For GaAs, Eg = 1.42 eV and the corresponding wavelength is
l = hc/ Eg = (6.62610-34 J s)(3108 m s-1)/(1.42 eV1.610-19 J/eV)
= 873 nm (invisible IR)
The wavelength of emitted radiation due to EHP recombination is 873 nm.
(d) For Si, Eg = 1.1 eV and the corresponding cut-off wavelength is,
lg = hc/ Eg = (6.62610-34 J s)(3108 m s-1)/(1.1 eV1.610-19 J/eV)
= 1120 nm
Since the 873 nm wavelength is shorter than the cut-off wavelength of 1120 nm, the
Si photodetector can detect the 873 nm radiation (Put differently, the photon energy
corresponding to 873 nm, 1.42 eV, is larger than the Eg, 1.1 eV, of Si which mean
that the Si photodetector can indeed detect the 873 nm radiation)
Example
Absorption coefficient
(a) If d is the thickness of a photodetector material, Io is the intensity of the incoming
radiation, the number of photons absorbed per unit volume of sample is
I 0 1 exp( d )
n ph
d h
Solution
(a) If I0 is the intensity of incoming radiation (energy flowing per unit area per
second), I0 exp(- d ) is the transmitted intensity through the specimen with
thickness d and thus I0 exp(- d ) is the “absorbed” intensity
Example
(b) What is the thickness of a Ge and In0.53Ga0.47As crystal layer that is needed for
absorbing 90% of the incident radiation at 1.5 mm?
For Ge, 5.2 105 m-1 at 1.5 m incident radiation.
For In0.53Ga0.47As, 7.5 105 m-1 at 1.5 m incident radiation.
1 exp( d ) 0.9
1
1 1 1
d ln ln 4 .428 10 6
m 4.428 m
1 0.9 5.2 10 1 0.9
5
1 1
d ln 3.07 10 6
m 3.07 m
7.5 10 1 0.9
5
Example
InGaAs pin Photodiodes
Consider a commercial InGaAs pin photodiode whose responsivity is shown in fig.
Its dark current is 5 nA.
(a) What optical power at a wavelength of 1.55 mm would give a photocurrent
that is twice the dark current? What is the QE of the photodetector at 1.55
mm?
(b) What would be the photocurrent if the incident power in a was at 1.3 mm?
What is the QE at 1.3 mm operation?
Responsivity (A/W)
1
0.8
0.6
The responsivity of an InGaAs
0.4 pin photodiode
0.2
0
800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800
Wavelength (nm)
Solution
(a) At l = 1.55´10-6 m, from the responsivity vs. wavelength curve we
have R 0.87 A/W. From the definition of responsivity,
Photocurre nt ( A) I ph
R
Incident Optical Power (W ) P0
2 I dark 2 5 109 ( A)
I ph
we have P0 11 .5 nW
R R 0.87 A / W )
From the definitions
of quantum efficiency h and responsivity,
e e
R
h hc
hcR (6.62 10 34 J sec)(3 108 m / s )(0.87 A / W )
0.70 (70 %)
e 19
(1.6 10 coul )(1.55 10 m ) 6
Note the following dimensional identities: A = C s-1 and W = J s-1 so that A W-1 = C J-1.
Thus, responsivity in terms of photocurrent per unit incident optical power is also charge
collected per unit incident energy.
Solution
(b) At l = 1.310-6 m, from the responsivity vs. wavelength curve, R = 0.82 A/W.
The QE at l = 1.3 mm is
hu > Eg E
e – h+
n+ p p+ h+
E e–
rnet Electrode
n+ p
Avalanche region
e-
x Ec
Ev
E(x)
h+
x
Absorptio
Impact of an energetic electron's kinetic energy
n
Avalanche region
region excites VB electron to the CV.
Photodetectors
Avalanche Photodiode (APD)
Electrode
Antireflection coating SiO2
n+ Guard ring n n+
p p n
Avalanche breakdown
p+ p+
Substrate Substrate
Electrode Electrode
Ip h
Electrode R Vout
InP InP Vr InGaAs
E e–
hu
h+
E
P+ N n n+
P and N refer to p- and
E (x) Avalanche Absorption
n-type wider-bandgap
region region
semiconductor.
x
Photodetectors
Heterojunction Photodiode
Separate Absorption and Multiplication (SAM) APD
Ec E
InP
Ev InGaAsP grading layer (b) An interposing grading layer
(InGaAsP) with an intermediate
InGaAs bandgap breaks DEv and makes it
h+ Ev easier for the hole to pass to the InP
layer.
Photogenerated electron concentration
exp( - a x) at time t = 0
v
de
x
A B
W
hu > E E
g
e–
h+
i R
ph
V
r