| Literature DB >> 35161680 |
Zhen Huang1,2,3, Wei Yan1, Zhaofeng Li1,2,4, Hui Dong1,5, Fuhua Yang2,4,6, Xiaodong Wang1,2,4,7,8.
Abstract
In this study, we fabricated three kinds of terahertz detectors with different leakage currents to analyze the plateau-like effect. The results indicate that the platform becomes increasingly apparent with the decrease in the leakage current. The fabricated device with the lowest leakage current shows a responsivity of 4.9 kV/W and noise equivalent power (NEP) of 72 pW/Hz. Further, it can be used for broadband detection between 215 GHz and 232 GHz with a voltage responsivity of more than 3.4 kV/W, and the response time can be up to 8 ns. Overall, the proposed device exhibits high sensitivity, large modulation frequency, and fast response, which indicates its excellent potential for detection and imaging applications in the THz range, including the detection of the 220 GHz atmospheric window.Entities:
Keywords: broadband detection; leakage currents; plateau-like effect; responsivity; terahertz detector
Year: 2022 PMID: 35161680 PMCID: PMC8840599 DOI: 10.3390/s22030933
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1(a) Overview of the detection model. (b) Local diagram of THz detector at a magnification of 20 m. (c) Specific parameters of HEMT. (d) Partial enlarged image of gate across the mesa at a magnification of 1 m.
Figure 2Experimental setup for the characterization of the THz detector.
Figure 3(a) I-V characteristics of sample 1. (b) Measured source–drain conductance () as a function of the in the subthreshold regime. (c) Different leakage currents of the three samples. (d) Output characteristics of sample 1 at V.
Figure 4(a) The simulated S11 of the structure. (b) The simulated impedance of the structure. (c) Distribution of the electric field on the surface of the TeraFET detector around the gate (top view). (d) Measured and simulated with and without a bowtie antenna from 175 to 384 GHz. The red line indicates the measured NEP of the detector with a bowtie antenna. All the results above correspond to sample 1.
Figure 5(a) Measured versus and curves of the three samples with different . (b) Simulated normalized as a function of the at different leakage currents. (c) Responsivity and NEP versus of sample 1. (d) Measured and fitted versus amplitude modulation frequency of electromagnetic wave of sample 1. (e) Temporal response of the fabricated device chopped by an electronic modulator at 1 kHz of sample 1. (f) Measured response time of sample 1.
Comparison of the performance and efficiency of the proposed and previously reported detectors at room temperature.
| Architecture | NEP (pW/ | Response Time (ns) | Measurement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| This paper | 72 | 4900 | 8 | Lock-in + Oscilloscope |
| GaN bowtie [ | 40 | 3600 | - | Lock-in |
| Si bowtie [ | 48 | 220 | - | Preamplifier + Lock-in |
| GaN bowtie [ | 25 | - | - | Lock-in |
| Graphene spiral [ | 350 | 28 | 9000 | Preamplifier + Lock-in + Oscilloscope |
| Si patch [ | 31 | - | 0.012 | Autocorrelation measurement |
| SiGe patch [ | - | 15 | 1.7 | On-chip amplifier |