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Number of results: 9
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Abstract

This work investigates the potential of p-type InAs/GaSb superlattice for the fabrication of full mid-wave megapixel detectors with n-on-p polarity. A significantly higher surface leakage is observed in deep-etched n-on-p photodiodes compared to p-on-n diodes. Shallow-etch and two-etch-step pixel geometry are demonstrated to mitigate the surface leakage on devices down to 10 µm with n-on-p polarity. A lateral diffusion length of 16 µm is extracted from the shallow etched pixels, which indicates that cross talk could be a major problem in small pitch arrays. Therefore, the two-etch-step process is used in the fabrication of 1280 × 1024 arrays with a 7.5 µm pitch, and a potential operating temperature up to 100 K is demonstrated.
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Authors and Affiliations

David Ramos
1 2
Marie Delmas
1
Ruslan Ivanov
1
Laura Žurauskaitė
1
Dean Evans
1
Susanne Almqvist
1
Smilja Becanovic
1
Per-Erik Hellström
2
Eric Costard
1
Linda Höglund
1

  1. IRnova AB, Isafjordsgatan 22, Kista 164 40, Sweden
  2.  School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Isafjordsgatan 22, Kista 164 40, Sweden
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Abstract

In the past ten years, InAs/InAsSb type-II superlattice has emerged as a promising technology for high-temperature mid-wave infrared photodetector. Nevertheless, transport properties are still poorly understood in this type of material. In this paper, optical and electro-optical measurements have been realised on InAs/InAsSb type-II superlattice mid-wave infrared photodetectors. Quantum efficiency of 50% is measured at 150 K, on the front side illumination and simple pass configuration. Absorption measurement, as well as lifetime measurement are used to theoretically calculate the quantum efficiency thanks to Hovel’s equation. Diffusion length values have been extracted from this model ranging from 1.55 µm at 90 K to 7.44 µm at 200 K. Hole mobility values, deduced from both diffusion length and lifetime measurements, varied from 3.64 cm²/Vs at 90 K to 37.7 cm²/Vs at 200 K. The authors then discuss the hole diffusion length and mobility variations within temperature and try to identify the intrinsic transport mechanisms involved in the superlattice structure.
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Authors and Affiliations

Maxime Bouschet
1 2
Vignesh Arounassalame
3
Anthony Ramiandrasoa
3
Jean-Philippe Perez
1
Nicolas Péré-Laperne
2
Isabelle Ribet-Mohamed
3
Philippe Christol
1

  1. IES, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, 860 Saint Priest St., F-34000 Montpellier, CEDEX 5, France
  2. LYNRED, BP 21, 364 de Valence Ave., 38113 Veurey-Voroize, France
  3. ONERA, Chemin de la Hunière, F-91761 Palaiseau Cedex, France
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Abstract

In this work, the authors investigated the influence of proton-irradiation on the dark current of XBp longwave infrared InAs/GaSb type-II superlattice barrier detectors, showing a cut-off wavelength from 11 µm to 13 µm at 80 K. The proton irradiations were performed with 63 MeV protons and fluences up to 8∙1011 H+/cm² on a type-II superlattice detector kept at cryogenic (100 K) or room temperature (300 K). The irradiation temperature of the detector is a key parameter influencing the effects of proton irradiation. The dark current density increases due to displacement damage dose effects and this increase is more important when the detector is proton-irradiated at room temperature rather than at cryogenic temperature.
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Authors and Affiliations

Clara Bataillon
1
Jean-Phillipe Perez
1
Rodolphe Alchaar
1
Alain Michez
1
Olivier Gilard
2
Olivier Saint-Pé
3
Philippe Christol
1

  1. University of Montpellier, 163 Auguste Broussonnet St., 34090 Montpellier, France
  2. CNES, 18 Edouard Belin Ave., 31400 Toulouse, France
  3. Airbus Defense & Space, 31 des Cosmonautes St., 31400 Toulouse, France
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Abstract

This work investigates the potential of InAs/GaSb superlattice detectors for the short-wavelength infrared spectral band. A barrier detector structure was grown by molecular beam epitaxy and devices were fabricated using standard photolithography techniques. Optical and electrical characterisations were carried out and the current limitations were identified. The authors found that the short diffusion length of ~1.8 µm is currently limiting the quantum efficiency (double-pass, no anti-reflection coating) to 43% at 2.8 µm and 200 K. The dark current density is limited by the surface leakage current which shows generation-recombination and diffusion characters below and above 195 K, respectively. By fitting the size dependence of the dark current, the bulk values have been estimated to be 6.57·10−6 A/cm2 at 200 K and 2.31·10−6 A/cm2 at 250 K, which is only a factor of 4 and 2, respectively, above the Rule07.
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Authors and Affiliations

Marie Delmas
1
David Ramos
1 2
Ruslan Ivanov
1
Laura Žurauskaitė
1
Dean Evans
1
David Rihtnesberg
1
Susanne Almqvist
1
Smilja Becanovic
1
Eric Costard
1
Linda Höglund
1

  1.  IRnova AB, Isafjordsgatan 22, Kista 164 40, Sweden
  2. School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Isafjordsgatan 22, Kista 164 40, Sweden
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Abstract

In recent years, type-II superlattice-based devices have completed the offer of the electronic industry in many areas of applications. Photodetection is one of them, especially in the mid-infrared wavelength range. It is due to the unique feature of a superlattice material, which is a tuneable bandgap. It is also believed that the dark current of superlattice-based photodetectors is strongly suppressed due to the suppression of the band-to-band tunnelling current in a superlattice material. This argument relies, however, on a semi-classical approach that treats superlattice as a bulk material with effective parameters extracted from the kp analysis. In the paper, a superlattice device is analysed on a quantum level: the non-equilibrium Green’s function method is applied to the two-band Hamiltonian of the InAs/GaSb superlattice p-i-n diode. The analysis concentrates on the band-to-band tunnelling with the aim to validate the correctness of a semi-classical description of the phenomenon. The results of calculations reveal that in a superlattice diode, the inter-band tunnelling occurs only for certain values of energy and in-plane momentum, for which electronic and hole sub-bands cross. The transitions occurring for vanishing in-plane momentum produce resonances in the current-voltage characteristics – the feature which was reported in a few experimental observations. This scenario is quite different from that occurring in bulk materials, where there is a range of energy-momentum pairs for which the band-to-band tunnelling takes place, and so current-voltage characteristics are free from any resonances. However, simulations show that, while not justified for a detailed analysis, the semi-classical description can be applied to superlattice-based devices for an ‘order of magnitude’ estimation of the band-to-band tunnelling current.
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Authors and Affiliations

Marcin Makowiec
1
ORCID: ORCID
Andrzej Kolek
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Department of Electronics Fundamentals, Rzeszow University of Technology, al. Powstańców Warszawy 12, Rzeszów 35-959, Poland
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Abstract

Dual-band infrared detector, which acquires more image information than single-band detectors, has excellent detection, recognition, and identification capabilities. The dual-band detector can have two bumps to connect with each absorber layer, but it is difficult to implement small pitch focal plane arrays and its fabrication process is complicated. Therefore, the most effective way for a dual-band detector is to acquire each band by bias-selectable with one bump. To aim this, a dual-band MWIR/LWIR detector based on an InAs/GaSb type-II superlattice nBn structure was designed and its performance was evaluated in this work. Since two absorber layers were separated by the barrier layer, each band can be detected by bias-selectable with one bump. The fabricated dual-band device exhibited the dark current and spectral response characteristics of MWIR and LWIR bands under negative and positive bias, respectively. Spectral crosstalk that is a major issue in dual-band detectors was also improved. Finally, a 20 μm pitch 640 × 512 dual-band detector was fabricated, and both MWIR and LWIR images exhibited an average noise equivalent temperature difference of 30 mK or less at 80 K.
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Authors and Affiliations

Hyun-Jin Lee
1
ORCID: ORCID
Jun Ho Eom
1
Hyun Chul Jung
1
Ko-Ku Kang
1
Seong Min Ryu
1
Ahreum Jang
1
Jong Gi Kim
1
Young Ho Kim
1
Han Jung
1
Sun Ho Kim
2
Jong Hwa Choi
2

  1.  i3system, Inc., 26-32, Gajeongbuk-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, 34113, Republic of Korea
  2. Agency of Defense Development, 34186 P.O.Box 35, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, Republic of Korea
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Abstract

Ga-free InAs/InAsSb type-II superlattice structures grown on GaSb substrates have demonstrated high performance for mid-wave infrared applications. However, realisation of long wavelength infrared photodetectors based on this material system still presents challenges, especially in terms of reduced quantum efficiency. This reduction is due, in part, to the increased type-II superlattice period required to attain longer wavelengths, as thicker periods decrease the wave-function overlap for the spatially separated quantum wells. One way to improve long wavelength infrared performance is to modify the type-II superlattice designs with a shorter superlattice period for a given wavelength, thereby increasing the wave-function overlap and the resulting optical absorption. Long wavelength infrared epitaxial structures with reduced periods have been realised by shifting the lattice constant of the type-II superlattice from GaSb to AlSb. Alternatively, epitaxial growth on substrates with orientations different than the traditional (100) surface presents another way for superlattice period reduction. In this work, the authors evaluate the performance of long wavelength infrared type-II superlattice detectors grown by molecular beam epitaxy using two different approaches to reduce the superlattice period: first, a metamorphic buffer to target the AlSb lattice parameter, and second, structures lattices matched to GaSb using substrates with different orientations. The use of the metamorphic buffer enabled a ~30% reduction in the superlattice period compared to reference baseline structures, maintaining a high quantum efficiency, but with the elevated dark current related to defects generated in the metamorphic buffer. Red-shift in a cut-off wavelength obtained from growths on high-index substrates offers a potential path to improve the infrared photodetector characteristics. Focal plane arrays were fabricated on (100), (311)A- and (211)B-oriented structures to compare the performance of each approach.
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Authors and Affiliations

Dmitri Lubyshev
1
Joel M. Fastenau
1
Michael Kattner
1
Philip Frey
1
Scott A. Nelson
1
Ryan Flick
1
Ying Wu
1
Amy W. K. Liu
1
Dennis E. Szymanski
1
Becky Martinez
2
Mark J. Furlong
2
Richard Dennis
3
Jason Bundas
3
Mani Sundaram
3

  1. IQE, Inc., 119 Technology Dr., Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA
  2. IQE, Pascal Close, St. Mellons, Cardiff, CF3 0LW, UK
  3. QmagiQ, LCC, 22 Cotton Rd., Unit H, Suite 180, Nashua, NH 03063, USA
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Abstract

The hyperspectral thermal imaging instrument for technology demonstration funded by NASA’s Earth Science Technology Office under the In-Space Validation of Earth Science Technologies program requires focal plane array with reasonably good performance at a low cost. The instrument is designed to fit in a 6U CubeSat platform for a low-Earth orbit. It will collect data on hydrological parameters and Earth surface temperature for agricultural remote sensing. The long wavelength infrared type-II strain layer superlattices barrier infrared detector focal plane array is chosen for this mission. With the driving requirement dictated by the power consumption of the cryocooler and signal-noise-ratio, cut-off wavelengths and dark current are utilized to model instrument operating temperature. Many focal plane arrays are fabricated and characterised, and the best performing focal plane array that fulfils the requirements is selected. The spectral band, dark current and 8–9.4 m pass band quantum efficiency of the candidate focal plane array are: 8–10.7 m, 2.1∙10−5 A/cm2, and 47%, respectively. The corresponding noise equivalent difference temperature and operability are 30 mK and 99.7%, respectively. Anti-reflective coating is deposited on the focal plane array surface to enhance the quantum efficiency and to reduce the interference pattern due to an absorption layer parallel surfaces cladding material.
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Authors and Affiliations

Sir B. Rafol
1
Sarath D. Gunapala
1
David Z. Ting 
1
Alexander Soibel
1
Arezou Khoshakhlagh
1
Sam A. Keo
1
Brian J. Pepper 
1
Cory J. Hill
1
Yuki Maruyama
1
Anita M. Fisher 
1
Ashok Sood
2
John Zeller 
2
Robert Wright
3
Paul Lucey
3
Miguel Nunes
3
Luke Flynn
3
Sachidananda Babu
4
Parminder Ghuman
4

  1. Center for Infrared Photodetectors, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California, USA
  2. Magnolia Optical Technologies, Inc, Albany New York 12203, USA
  3. Hawai'i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
  4. NASA Earth Science Technology Office Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
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Abstract

Mid-wavelength infrared detectors and focal plane array based on n-type InAs/InAsSb type-II strained layer superlattice absorbers have achieved excellent performance. In the long and very long wavelength infrared, however, n-type InAs/InAsSb type-II strained layer superlattice detectors are limited by their relatively small absorption coefficients and short growth-direction hole diffusion lengths, and consequently have only been able to achieve modest level of quantum efficiency. The authors present an overview of their progress in exploring complementary barrier infrared detectors that contain p-type InAs/InAsSb type-II strained layer superlattice absorbers for quantum efficiency enhancement. The authors describe some representative results, and also provide additional references for more in-depth discussions. Results on InAs/InAsSb type-II strained layer superlattice focal plane arrays for potential NASA applications are also briefly discussed.
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Authors and Affiliations

David Z. Ting
1
Alexander Soibel
1
Arezou Khoshakhlagh
1
Sam A. Keo
1
Sir B. Rafol
1
Anita M. Fisher
1
Cory J. Hill
1
Brian J. Pepper
1
Yuki Maruyama
1
Sarath D. Gunapala
1

  1. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 4800 Oak Grove Dr., Pasadena, CA 91109-8099, USA

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