| Literature DB >> 35632282 |
Qiaoli Liu1, Li Xu1, Yuxin Jin1, Shifeng Zhang1, Yitong Wang1, Anqi Hu1, Xia Guo1.
Abstract
Highly sensitive ultraviolet (UV) photodetectors are highly desired for industrial and scientific applications. However, the responsivity of silicon photodiodes in the UV wavelength band is relatively low due to high-density Si/SiO2 interface states. In this paper, a coplanar avalanche photodiode (APD) was developed with a virtual guard ring design. When working in Geiger mode, it exhibited a strong UV response. The responsivity of 4 × 103 A/W (corresponding to a gain of 8 × 106) at 261 nm is measured under the incident power of 0.6 μW with an excess bias of 1.5 V. To the best of our knowledge, the maximum 3-dB bandwidth of 1.4 GHz is the first report ever for a Si APD when working in the Geiger mode in spite of the absence of an integrated CMOS read-out circuit.Entities:
Keywords: UV response; avalanche buildup; avalanche photodiodes (APDs); gain; responsivity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35632282 PMCID: PMC9146899 DOI: 10.3390/s22103873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1Design and electrical characteristics of the APD. (a) Upper panel: an optical microscope of the 100-μm Si APD. Bottom panel: the cross-sectional view of the device. (b) Simulated electric field at breakdown with a depletion region width of ~5 μm. (c) Probability to breakdown is simulated at the V of 2.5 V by Sentaurus TCAD. Inset: Illustration of photogenerated carrier transit process under the external bias. Part of photogenerated holes trigger the avalanche, while most of photogenerated electrons are trapped at the Si/SiO2 interface. (d) Measured reverse dark current-voltage (I-V) curves at temperature from 130 K to 292 K in steps of about 40 K, respectively, for a Si APD with a diameter of 100 μm. Inset: Temperature dependence of V, which is calculated to be 23.5 mV/K for the temperature ranging from 130 K to 292 K.
Figure 2Photoresponse and frequency response of the APD. (a) Measured reverse current-voltage-gain curves of the Si APD at different incident light power (0.6 μW, 1.8 μW, 6 μW, 30 μW, 180 μW) of 261 nm. Dark current, photocurrent, and gain are represented by black short dot, colored dash line and corresponding colored solid line, respectively. (b) The responsivity as a function of reverse bias under the illumination of 261 nm. Inset: Extracted responsivity and gain at 30 V from Figure 2a and the corresponding fitting results. (c) Spectral responsivity measurement results biased above breakdown for the incident light wavelength from 200 nm to 400 nm. Inset: Spectral responsivity biased before breakdown. (d) Measured optical modulation frequency response at different reverse biases when the incident light wavelength is 850 nm for the 100-μm Si APD.
The UV response comparison with other reported papers.
| Reference | Structure | Responsivity | Wavelength | Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | photodiode | 0.2 A/W | 256 nm | 2 V |
| [ | photodiode | 0.06 A/W | 260 nm | 0 V |
| [ | photodiode | 0.1 A/W | 255 nm | 0 V |
| [ | photodiode | 0.2 A/W | 200 nm | 0 V |
| [ | APD | 0.18 A/W | 275 nm | 4 V |
| [ | APD | 0.05 A/W | 291 nm | 4 V |
| ~103 A/W | Vex = 0.5 V | |||
| This work | APD | 0.5 mA/W | 261 nm | 10 V |
| 4 × 103 A/W | Vex = 1.5 V |
Figure 3Electric field simulation and 1/M versus reverse voltage. (a) α (red symbol), β (blue symbol), and electric field (black symbol) distribution at V. Inset: Extracted doping profile of the structure. (b) 1/M as a function of reverse bias at 30 μW (black line) and fitting curves (red dash line) from Figure 2a. Inset: Enlarged view at the breakdown.