Chap14. Photodiode Detectors

Similar documents
Detectors for Optical Communications

Optical Receivers Theory and Operation

Photodiode: LECTURE-5

Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 11 Detectors

Figure Responsivity (A/W) Figure E E-09.

Lecture 18: Photodetectors

Figure Figure E E-09. Dark Current (A) 1.

Optical Communications

Optical Amplifiers. Continued. Photonic Network By Dr. M H Zaidi

Key Questions ECE 340 Lecture 28 : Photodiodes

Lecture 9 External Modulators and Detectors

UNIT III. By Ajay Kumar Gautam Asst. Prof. Electronics & Communication Engineering Dev Bhoomi Institute of Technology & Engineering, Dehradun

Fundamentals of CMOS Image Sensors

Lecture 14: Photodiodes

NON-AMPLIFIED PHOTODETECTOR USER S GUIDE

LEDs, Photodetectors and Solar Cells

OPTOELECTRONIC and PHOTOVOLTAIC DEVICES

OFCS OPTICAL DETECTORS 11/9/2014 LECTURES 1

FIBER OPTICS. Prof. R.K. Shevgaonkar. Department of Electrical Engineering. Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. Lecture: 20

Photodiode Characteristics and Applications

14.2 Photodiodes 411

NON-AMPLIFIED HIGH SPEED PHOTODETECTOR USER S GUIDE

Unit 2 Semiconductor Devices. Lecture_2.5 Opto-Electronic Devices


NAME: Last First Signature

Investigate the characteristics of PIN Photodiodes and understand the usage of the Lightwave Analyzer component.

Problem 4 Consider a GaAs p-n + junction LED with the following parameters at 300 K: Electron diusion coecient, D n = 25 cm 2 =s Hole diusion coecient

Objective Type Questions 1. Why pure semiconductors are insulators at 0 o K? 2. What is effect of temperature on barrier voltage? 3.

UNIT IX ELECTRONIC DEVICES

Lab VIII Photodetectors ECE 476

HIGH SPEED FIBER PHOTODETECTOR USER S GUIDE

Università degli Studi di Roma Tor Vergata Dipartimento di Ingegneria Elettronica. Analogue Electronics. Paolo Colantonio A.A.

Avalanche Photodiode. Instructor: Prof. Dietmar Knipp Presentation by Peter Egyinam. 4/19/2005 Photonics and Optical communicaton

2nd Asian Physics Olympiad

10/27/2009 Reading: Chapter 10 of Hambley Basic Device Physics Handout (optional)

UNIT 3: FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTORS

Department of Electrical Engineering IIT Madras

Downloaded from

MOSFET short channel effects

Chapter 3 OPTICAL SOURCES AND DETECTORS

CONTENTS. 2.2 Schrodinger's Wave Equation 31. PART I Semiconductor Material Properties. 2.3 Applications of Schrodinger's Wave Equation 34

Solar-energy conversion and light emission in an atomic monolayer p n diode

Review Energy Bands Carrier Density & Mobility Carrier Transport Generation and Recombination

Figure 2d. Optical Through-the-Air Communications Handbook -David A. Johnson,

Semiconductor Devices Lecture 5, pn-junction Diode

Section 2.3 Bipolar junction transistors - BJTs

Introduction to Photovoltaics

LOGARITHMIC PROCESSING APPLIED TO NETWORK POWER MONITORING

Photons and solid state detection

ECEN 4606, UNDERGRADUATE OPTICS LAB

Solar Cell Parameters and Equivalent Circuit

Amplified Photodetectors

Ultra-sensitive SiGe Bipolar Phototransistors for Optical Interconnects

THE METAL-SEMICONDUCTOR CONTACT

Copyright -International Centre for Diffraction Data 2010 ISSN

Amplified High Speed Photodetectors

Non-amplified Photodetectors

Module 10 : Receiver Noise and Bit Error Ratio

Lecture 8 Optical Sensing. ECE 5900/6900 Fundamentals of Sensor Design

What is the highest efficiency Solar Cell?

Lecture 9: Limiting and Clamping Diode Circuits. Voltage Doubler. Special Diode Types.

Photon Count. for Brainies.

Silicon Avalanche Photodetectors Fabricated With Standard CMOS/BiCMOS Technology Myung-Jae Lee

QUANTUM EFFICIENCY (Q.E)

Measure the roll-off frequency of an acousto-optic modulator

A silicon avalanche photodetector fabricated with standard CMOS technology with over 1 THz gain-bandwidth product

Fundamentals of Power Semiconductor Devices

Physics of Waveguide Photodetectors with Integrated Amplification

Difference between BJTs and FETs. Junction Field Effect Transistors (JFET)

SRM INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (DEEMED UNIVERSITY)

Section:A Very short answer question

Chapter 16 Other Two-Terminal Devices

Chapter 8. Field Effect Transistor

Prepared by: Dr. Rishi Prakash, Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering Page 1 of 5

LAB V. LIGHT EMITTING DIODES

Electronic devices-i. Difference between conductors, insulators and semiconductors

EEE118: Electronic Devices and Circuits

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION


LAB V. LIGHT EMITTING DIODES

Physics and Technology

Opto-electronic Receivers

CMOS Phototransistors for Deep Penetrating Light

Modelling and Analysis of Four-Junction Tendem Solar Cell in Different Environmental Conditions Mr. Biraju J. Trivedi 1 Prof. Surendra Kumar Sriwas 2

Instruction manual and data sheet ipca h

Digital Integrated Circuits A Design Perspective. The Devices. Digital Integrated Circuits 2nd Devices

Recent Development and Study of Silicon Solid State Photomultiplier (MRS Avalanche Photodetector)

Study and Measurement of the Main Parameters of a Laser quadrant Detector

Non-amplified High Speed Photodetectors

UNIT VIII-SPECIAL PURPOSE ELECTRONIC DEVICES. 1. Explain tunnel Diode operation with the help of energy band diagrams.

P-N Diodes & Applications

Basic Electronics Important questions

Lecture 4 -- Tuesday, Sept. 19: Non-uniform injection and/or doping. Diffusion. Continuity/conservation. The five basic equations.

Unit III FET and its Applications. 2 Marks Questions and Answers

UNIT-III SOURCES AND DETECTORS. According to the shape of the band gap as a function of the momentum, semiconductors are classified as

Choosing and Using Photo Sensors

Development of High Sensitivity SWIR APD Receivers

Chapter 1: Semiconductor Diodes

OPTI510R: Photonics. Khanh Kieu College of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona Meinel building R.626

1 Semiconductor-Photon Interaction

Transcription:

Chap14. Photodiode Detectors Mohammad Ali Mansouri-Birjandi mansouri@ece.usb.ac.ir mamansouri@yahoo.com Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Sistan and Baluchestan (USB) Design of Optical Logic Gates Using Photonic Crystal 1

14.1. Biasing the Photodiode 14.2. Output Saturation 14.2.1. Photovoltaic Mode 14.2.2. Photoconductive Mode 14-3. Response Time 14.3.1. Junction Capacitance 14.3.2. Carrier Transit Time 14-4. Types of Photodiodes 14.4.1. PIN Photodiode 14.4.2. Avalanche Photodiode 14.4.3. Schottky Photodiode 14-5 Signal-to-Noise Ratio 14-6 Detector Circuits 14.6.1. High-Impedance Amplifier 14.6.2. Transimpedance Amplifier

Two principle drawbacks of photoconductive detectors : 1. Poor time response, due to long electron lifetime 2. Significant shot noise from high level of dark current remedy problems photodiode detector

14.1. BIASING THE PHOTODIODE Two fundamental categories: 1. photovoltaic mode 2. photoconductive mode In either case photocurrent generates V R across R, constitutesdetector output signal

To evaluate current: Another relation: I V relation for semiconductor diode for no light absorption When light is absorbed an additional negative current : fraction of incident photons that absorbed to create electron hole pairs.

total circuit current Diode current i and voltage V d must satisfy both Eq.(14-1) and (14-3) simultaneously load-line analysis

Depending on application each modes have advantages and disadvantages. One important application utilizing photovoltaic mode is solar cell. Electrical power supplied to load resistor: Where practical conditions of solar illumination

EXAMPLE 14-1: A silicon solar cell has an area of4 cm 2, reverse saturation current density1.5 10 8 A/cm 2, and diode ideality factor β = 1. Assume that light of intensity I = 1000 W/m 2 and average wavelength500nm is incident on the cell, and that 80% of the light is absorbed. Determine optimum load resistance and power conversion efficiency. Repeat calculation for β = 2. Solution: Power striking cell Photocurrent For room temperature (20 C = 293 K)

For a particular value of R, solved numerically, and efficiency By varying R, graph in Fig. 14-4 obtained. optimum efficiency: 8.94% for R = 2.5. optimum efficiency: 17.9% for R = 5.

14-2. OUTPUT SATURATION In this section, examine linearity of photodiode detector circuits using two types of biasing modes. 14.2.1. Photovoltaic Mode When R is very large

If Where For Defining

Photodiode can be modeled Higher values of R sh are generally desirable, because detector is then more sensitive to weak light signals For a typical room-temperature siliconphotodiode with 1 cm 2 area, R sh 10 MΩ.

Summarize response of open-circuit photodiode to varying optical powers: 1. At low incident power levels responseis linearwith power 2. At high power levels response becomes logarithmic. Deviationfrom linearity at high optical powers saturationof output signal. To increaserange linearity R L can be made small. Analytically conclusion: If for photovoltaic mode

Equations in terms of equivalent circuit

When Defining Easier to measure a larger voltage, so a larger R L is desirable However, as R L is increased, one of two conditions eventually break down

One possibility breaks down Sameresult obtained for open-circuit condition Although V out is no longer linear with R L, it is still linear with P in. Other possibility breaks down V out is no longer linear with either R L or P in. Saturation will occur at a certain value of product P in.r L.

Therefore, a trade-off between sensitivity and dynamic range Saturation with incident power for different values of load resistance

14.2.2. Photoconductive Mode Saturation behavior by referring to the load-line analysis of Fig.14-3.

Simple analytical expression for detector signal in linear regime From Fig. 14-3 V d < 0 in linear regime. Good approximation

Detector output have two components One proportionalto incident optical power Other independent of power. Component varies with P in is identical to expression obtained for photovoltaic mode Responsivity of detector Then output in photoconductive mode

According to Eq. (14-17), Change in output voltage is linear with both R L and P in. However, this relation will only hold as long as V d < 0, which requires V out < V B If P in increased above point V out V B output saturates, and becomes approximately independentof P in.

Differences between photoconductive and photovoltaic modes 1. Saturationoccurs at V out V B in photoconductive mode, but at only V out V T in photovoltaic mode. This, improveddynamic range in photoconductive mode. 2. Photoconductive mode has a dark current, whereas photovoltaic mode does not Two consequencespresence of dark current : 1. First, it contributes a constant background level that must be subtracted from detector output to obtain true signal. 2. Second, it contributes shot noise to detector output

If Then both of these effects become unimportant. In this large-signal regime, photoconductive mode is best choice for detector circuit. If Then shot noise from dark current can become a dominant source of detector noise. In this small-signal regime, photovoltaic mode is a better choice.

14-3. RESPONSE TIME Time takes for detector output to change in response to changes in input light intensity. In photoconductive-type detectors Response time is quite poor because of electron replenishment process In photodiode detectors Replenishment process is suppressed by p n junction, which presents a barrier to movement of majority carriers. Therefore response time is significantly improved In this section, consider implications and relative importance of transit time and capacitance in determining photodiode response time.

14.3.1. Junction Capacitance Evaluated by determining how charge on either side of junction changes in response to a changing diode voltage. assume junction width d When an external voltage V applied to diode

For reverse-bias voltage

If incident power suddenly switched from zero to constant value at t = 0 RC: time constant of circuit Units: seconds with R in ohms and C in farads. rise time: time taken to rise from 10% to 90% of final value. For RC circuit:

3 db electrical bandwidth as B Results show smallercapacitancelead to faster time response and larger bandwidth Several parametersto reduce capacitance 1. Increase reverse-bias voltage V B makes photoconductive mode (V B > 0) inherently fasterthan photovoltaic mode (V B =0) 2. decreasejunction area A. give a faster time response. 3.N D is made smaller, because junction width d then increases.

Reducing capacitance is one way to reduce RC time constant. ReducingR L has same effect, although decreases detector sensitivity summarize various trade-offs

14.3.2. Carrier Transit Time Single p n Junction Current pulse from a single photoexcited electron lasts as long as electron moving through a region with high electric field. Since E field is high only in depletion region current pulse last a time known as transit time: d: width of depletion region v: velocity of charge carrier

Appear higher E field gives shorter transit time. However, dincreases with increasing E, and tends to increase transit time. To see how these two effects offset each other: Higher N D appear best for fast time response. However, junction capacitanceincreasewith higher N D, result slower response Therefore time response will be optimized when contributions.

EXAMPLE 14-2 A p + n silicon photodiode has an junction areaof 1mm 2, and a reverse bias of 10 V is applied through a 10 k load resistor. Determine doping levelin lightly doped n region that minimizesthe response time, and determine junction width for this doping level. Take holemobilityin Si to be 5 10 2 m 2 /Vs. Solution: Optimumtime response occur when capacitance rise time 2.2R L Cis approximately equal to transit time t tr.

14-4. TYPES OF PHOTODIODES 14.4.1. PIN Photodiode Assumed that photoexcited electron hole pairs created in depletion region, where there is a strong E field. This is not always the case:

Solution: Eliminate diffusion region. By decreasing donor concentration in n region. Middle region is very lightly doped PIN photodiode most commonly used photon detector: - Eliminates carrier diffusion, - d is fixed by geometry of device

EXAMPLE 14-3 A silicon PIN photodiode has an intrinsicregion of thickness 0.1 mm. Determine the minimum rise time for the detector, its corresponding bandwidth, and the required reverse-bias voltage. Repeat for an intrinsic region of thickness of 10 μm. Solution: Repeating for d = 10 μm:

EXAMPLE 14-4 For the silicon PIN photodiodes of Example14-3, determine the absorptionefficiency for 860 nm light. At this wavelength, the absorption coefficient in silicon is 335cm 1 and the reflectivity (from air) is 32%. Solution: Thinner intrinsic region be less efficient at absorbing incident light. Therefore, a trade-off between detector speed and sensitivity.

14.4.2. Avalanche Photodiode To increase signal generated by detector, before amplification. One way is through avalanche multiplication process:

Creation of electron hole pairs by impact ionization in terms of energy band:

A photodiode utilizing avalanche multiplication to achieve gain is termed an avalanche photodiode or APD: Structure of APD, differs from PIN: 1. light enters through a highly doped n-type layer rather than a p-type layer. 2. additional p-type layer added between highly doped n layer and intrinsic layer. Operation of APD :

Multiplication factor M: Ratio of photocurrent with amplification to photocurrent without amplification Relation between E(x) and bias voltage (magnitudes only): As bias voltage increases, area under E(x) curve increases proportionately.

At some critical voltage, depletion region reaches through to highly doped p+ region, with electric field extending uniformly through out intrinsic region. Device biased in this way is termed a reach-through APD. Typical variation of responsivity with applied bias voltage for a reach-through APD.

14.2.3. Schottky Photodiode utilizes metal semiconductor junction to separate and collect photogenerated charge carriers. operation of a Schottky photodiode for metal n n+ configuration,

some advantages of Schottky photodiodes over PIN photodiodes: 1. Only one metal semiconductor connection needs to be made (metal n+), and ohmic contacts are readily formed for such a junction. 2. Improved time response. 3. Metal junctions can be made with a wide variety of semiconductors, including those with wide band gap Eg, such as SiC, GaN, and AlGaN. some disadvantages of Schottky photodiodes: Less efficient than PIN photodiodes at longer wavelengths, due to reflection and absorption of light in metal layer.

14-5. SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO signal-to-noise ratio (SNR): Ratio of electrical signal power to electrical noise power. Electrical signal power Note: Applies only when detector circuit is well below saturation. In photoconductive mode signal current defined as measured current minus dark current.

For shot noise For thermal noise we can write:

limiting cases one source of noise dominates: Large signal When, and (recall ) Noise is dominated by shot noise from signal current SNR is independent of load resistance. SNR is roughly number of charge carriers produced during measurement time. SNR increases linearly with incident optical power.

2. Small signal, large RL. When and SNR is limited by shot noise from dark current i0, SNR is independent of load resistance SNR increases with square of incident optical power. 3. Small signal, small RL. When and SNR is limited by thermal noise from load resistor RL.

noise equivalent power (NEP): Optical power that gives SNR = 1 In limiting case #2 : MKS unit for NEP is watts An alternative unit for optical power is dbm: Power in db relative to 1 mw.

wavelength dependence of D*

14-6. DETECTOR CIRCUITS 14.6.1. High-Impedance Amplifier 3 db electrical bandwidth:

14.6.2. TransimpedanceAmplifier When response time is important, convert photocurrent iλ directly into an output voltage, bandwidth