1 detectors rit course number 1051-465 lecture n: lecture title

45
1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

Upload: oswald-dalton

Post on 14-Dec-2015

224 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

1

Detectors

RIT Course Number 1051-465Lecture N: Lecture Title

Page 2: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

2

Section Title Slide

Page 3: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

3

pn Junction Review

• PN junctions are fabricated from a monocrystalline piece of semiconductor with both a P-type and N-type region in proximity at a junction.

• The transfer of electrons from the N side of the junction to holes annihilated on the P side of the junction produces a barrier voltage. This is 0.6 to 0.7 V in silicon, and varies with other semiconductors.

• A forward biased PN junction conducts a current once the barrier voltage is overcome. The external applied potential forces majority carriers toward the junction where recombinetion takes place, allowing current flow.

• A reverse biased PN junction conducts almost no current. The applied reverse bias attracts majority carriers away from the junction. This increases the thickness of the nonconducting depletion region.

• Reverse biased PN junctions show a temperature dependent reverse leakage current. This is less than a µA in small silicon diodes.

Page 4: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

4

N-type

Page 5: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

5

Band Diagram: Acceptor Dopant in Semiconductor

• For Si, add a group III element to “accept” an electron and make p-type Si (more positive “holes”).

• “Missing” electron results in an extra “hole”, with an acceptor energy level EA just above the valence band EV.

– Holes easily formed in valence band, greatly increasing the electrical conductivity.

• Fermi level EF moves down towards EV.

EA

EC

EV

EF

p-type Si

Page 6: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

6

P-type

Page 7: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

7

Conduction in p/n-type Semiconductors

Page 8: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

8

Page 9: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

9

PN Junction: Band Diagram

• Due to diffusion, electrons move from n to p-side and holes from p to n-side.

• Causes depletion zone at junction where immobile charged ion cores remain.

• Results in a built-in electric field (103 to 105 V/cm), which opposes further diffusion.

• Note: EF levels are aligned across pn junction under equilibrium.

Depletion Zone

electrons

pn regions in equilibrium

holesEV

EF

EC

EF

EV

EF

EC

+++

++++

++++

+––––

––––

––––

p-type

n-type

Page 10: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

10

PN Junction: Band Diagram under Bias

• Forward Bias: negative voltage on n-side promotes diffusion of electrons by decreasing built-in junction potential higher current.

• Reverse Bias: positive voltage on n-side inhibits diffusion of electrons by increasing built-in junction potential lower current.

Minority Carriers

Forward Bias Reverse BiasEquilibrium

e–e– e–

Majority Carriers

p-type n-type p-type n-type p-type n-type

–V +V

Page 11: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

11

Forward & Reverse Biased

Page 12: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

12

PN Junction: IV Characteristics

• Current-Voltage Relationship

• Forward Bias: current exponentially increases.

• Reverse Bias: low leakage current equal to ~Io.

• Ability of pn junction to pass current in only one direction is known as “rectifying” behavior.

/[ 1]eV kToI I e

Reverse Bias

ForwardBias

Page 13: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

13

• Current-Voltage Relationship

• Forward Bias: current exponentially increases.

• Reverse Bias: low leakage current equal to ~Io.

• Ability of pn junction to pass current in only one direction is known as “rectifying” behavior.

/[ 1]eV kToI I e

PN Junction: IV Characteristics

Page 14: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

14

Doped Silicon

Page 15: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

15

Suitable doped silicon bandgaps for detectors

Page 16: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

16

Generation & Recombination

• In intrinsic semiconductor– n = p = ni

• ni is strongly temperature dependent• This is because at a give temperature

– Recombination of electrons (ri)= thermal generation rate (gi)

• ri = Bnp = gi (= Bni**2 for intrinsic semiconductor)

Page 17: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

17

Photon induced excess carriers

Page 18: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

18

Photon induced excess carriers

Page 19: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

19

Photon induced excess carriers

Page 20: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

20

xx

Page 21: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

21

xx

Page 22: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

22

xx

Page 23: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

23

xx

Page 24: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

24

Rate of change of carrier concentration

Page 25: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

25

Page 26: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

26

Page 27: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

27

Diffusion

Page 28: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

28

Page 29: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

29

Page 30: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

30

Page 31: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

31

Page 32: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

32

PN Junction

Page 33: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

33

PN Junction

Page 34: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

34

Page 35: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

35

Page 36: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

36

Page 37: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

37

Put it all together …

Page 38: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

38

Steps

• PN junction is reversed biased. • Shutter opened and photon enters semiconductor• Interacts with lattice generates minority carrier• Minority carrier diffuses till it reaches vicinity of junction• Junction field drives minority carrier across junction and discharges junction capacitance• At the end of some integration time measure voltage (V2)across junction.• Reset junction voltage to initial reverse bias value and measure its value (V1).• Difference in voltage is proportional to signal.

ΔQ = C1(V1-Vbi) * (V1-vbi) – C2(V2-Vbi) * (V2-Vbi)

Page 39: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

39

Designing a junction

Page 40: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

40

Dark Signal

Page 41: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

41

Slide Title

• xxxxxx

Page 42: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

42

Section Title Slide

Page 43: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

43

Slide Title

• xxxxxx

Page 44: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

44

Section Title Slide

Page 45: 1 Detectors RIT Course Number 1051-465 Lecture N: Lecture Title

45

Slide Title

• xxxxxx