Diffusion current characteristics of defect-limited nBn mid-wave infrared detectors

Mid-wave infrared, nBn detectors remain limited by diffusion current generated in the absorber region even when defect concentrations are elevated. In contrast, defect-limited conventional pn-junction based photodiodes are subject to Shockley-Read-Hall generation in the depletion region and subseque...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied physics letters Vol. 106; no. 17
Main Authors Savich, G. R., Sidor, D. E., Du, X., Morath, C. P., Cowan, V. M., Wicks, G. W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melville American Institute of Physics 27.04.2015
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Summary:Mid-wave infrared, nBn detectors remain limited by diffusion current generated in the absorber region even when defect concentrations are elevated. In contrast, defect-limited conventional pn-junction based photodiodes are subject to Shockley-Read-Hall generation in the depletion region and subsequent carrier drift. Ideal nBn-architecture devices would be limited by Auger 1 generation; however, typical nBn detectors exhibit defect-dominated performance associated with Shockley-Read-Hall generation in the quasi-neutral absorbing region. Reverse saturation current density characteristics for defect-limited devices depend on the minority carrier diffusion length, absorbing layer thickness, and the dominant minority carrier generation mechanism. Unlike pn-based photodiodes, changes in nBn dark current due to elevated defect concentrations do not manifest at small biases, thus, the zero bias resistance area product, RoA, is not a useful parameter for characterizing nBn-architecture photodetector performance.
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ISSN:0003-6951
1077-3118
DOI:10.1063/1.4919450