Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection

Infrared photodetectors have been extensively used in military and civilian applications. Currently, antimony (Sb) based III–V semiconductors are considered as viable alternatives to Mercury-Cadmium Telluride material which takes the dominant position in middle infrared range. Among them, InAs1-xSbx...

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Main Author: Suo, Fei
Other Authors: Zhang Dao Hua
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153305
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-153305
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Optics, optoelectronics, photonics
Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Semiconductors
spellingShingle Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Optics, optoelectronics, photonics
Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Semiconductors
Suo, Fei
Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
description Infrared photodetectors have been extensively used in military and civilian applications. Currently, antimony (Sb) based III–V semiconductors are considered as viable alternatives to Mercury-Cadmium Telluride material which takes the dominant position in middle infrared range. Among them, InAs1-xSbx has gained much interest owing to their various benefits for realizing high-performance middle infrared photodetectors. However, it still faces the challenge in realizing high-temperature operational photodetection. This PhD program will primarily deal with the optimization of InAsSb-based heterojunction photodiode and enhancement of photodetection performance by integrating with different two-dimensional photonic structures. In this thesis, InAsSb-based photodiodes with heterojunction architectures are proposed to achieve middle infrared photodetection with low dark current. The photodiode includes wide bandgap and thin quaternary layers to reduce the bulk dark current. Photodiodes with square mesas from 500 μm to 20 μm were fabricated and their dark currents are characterized at temperatures from 77 K to room temperature (293 K). The results indicate that the methods we adopted for reducing dark current are effective. The dark current densities achieved are lower than or comparable with that of the state-of-the-art middle infrared photodetectors. To further improve the detection performance, various photonic structures are investigated for manipulating photoresponse capability. As the raised light-matter interaction in active region can facilitate light absorption without sacrificing the response speed, the quantum efficiency of the device can be significantly improved without involving a very thick absorption layer. Detailed simulations have been done to demonstrate the broadband absorption enhancement. The internal resonance phenomenon is also studied to figure out the physical mechanisms. Different plasmonic structures were selected for integration with the heterojunction photodiode to enhance quantum efficiency. It is because the metallic nanostructures at sub-wavelength scale own the capability to concentrate light and produce strong electric field in the extremely small volume, thus facilitating the significant absorption of electromagnetic waves. Using this strategy, a maximum one order of magnitude of enhancement in middle infrared room-temperature detectivity (to about 2.0×1010 Jones) is achieved under zero bias without sacrificing the response speed. Another enhancement technique we applied is to fabricate a photon-trapping hole-array structure in the heterojunction photodiode. With the help of the photon-trapping structure, the combined effects of the formed lateral propagating modes and reduced effective refractive index can lead to polarization-independently enhanced absorption. Broadband photoresponse improvements of 26% to 170% are demonstrated in 2-5 µm range under zero bias at temperatures from 293 K to 78 K. Furthermore, the photon-trapping hole-array structure is also fabricated in the InAsSb-GaSb heterostructure for the dual-band photoresponse enhancement in near- and mid-infrared regions. The responsivity enhancement factors under zero bias are 12% and 33% for the near- and mid-infrared, respectively, at room temperature, and they are increased to 71% and 79% at 220 K.
author2 Zhang Dao Hua
author_facet Zhang Dao Hua
Suo, Fei
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Suo, Fei
author_sort Suo, Fei
title Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
title_short Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
title_full Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
title_fullStr Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
title_full_unstemmed Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
title_sort photonic structure enhancement on photodetection
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153305
_version_ 1772827107690283008
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1533052023-07-04T15:42:32Z Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection Suo, Fei Zhang Dao Hua School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering EDHZHANG@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Optics, optoelectronics, photonics Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Semiconductors Infrared photodetectors have been extensively used in military and civilian applications. Currently, antimony (Sb) based III–V semiconductors are considered as viable alternatives to Mercury-Cadmium Telluride material which takes the dominant position in middle infrared range. Among them, InAs1-xSbx has gained much interest owing to their various benefits for realizing high-performance middle infrared photodetectors. However, it still faces the challenge in realizing high-temperature operational photodetection. This PhD program will primarily deal with the optimization of InAsSb-based heterojunction photodiode and enhancement of photodetection performance by integrating with different two-dimensional photonic structures. In this thesis, InAsSb-based photodiodes with heterojunction architectures are proposed to achieve middle infrared photodetection with low dark current. The photodiode includes wide bandgap and thin quaternary layers to reduce the bulk dark current. Photodiodes with square mesas from 500 μm to 20 μm were fabricated and their dark currents are characterized at temperatures from 77 K to room temperature (293 K). The results indicate that the methods we adopted for reducing dark current are effective. The dark current densities achieved are lower than or comparable with that of the state-of-the-art middle infrared photodetectors. To further improve the detection performance, various photonic structures are investigated for manipulating photoresponse capability. As the raised light-matter interaction in active region can facilitate light absorption without sacrificing the response speed, the quantum efficiency of the device can be significantly improved without involving a very thick absorption layer. Detailed simulations have been done to demonstrate the broadband absorption enhancement. The internal resonance phenomenon is also studied to figure out the physical mechanisms. Different plasmonic structures were selected for integration with the heterojunction photodiode to enhance quantum efficiency. It is because the metallic nanostructures at sub-wavelength scale own the capability to concentrate light and produce strong electric field in the extremely small volume, thus facilitating the significant absorption of electromagnetic waves. Using this strategy, a maximum one order of magnitude of enhancement in middle infrared room-temperature detectivity (to about 2.0×1010 Jones) is achieved under zero bias without sacrificing the response speed. Another enhancement technique we applied is to fabricate a photon-trapping hole-array structure in the heterojunction photodiode. With the help of the photon-trapping structure, the combined effects of the formed lateral propagating modes and reduced effective refractive index can lead to polarization-independently enhanced absorption. Broadband photoresponse improvements of 26% to 170% are demonstrated in 2-5 µm range under zero bias at temperatures from 293 K to 78 K. Furthermore, the photon-trapping hole-array structure is also fabricated in the InAsSb-GaSb heterostructure for the dual-band photoresponse enhancement in near- and mid-infrared regions. The responsivity enhancement factors under zero bias are 12% and 33% for the near- and mid-infrared, respectively, at room temperature, and they are increased to 71% and 79% at 220 K. Doctor of Philosophy 2021-11-17T06:36:09Z 2021-11-17T06:36:09Z 2021 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Suo, F. (2021). Photonic structure enhancement on photodetection. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153305 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153305 10.32657/10356/153305 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University