Title: Chapter 7. Light Detectors
1Chapter 7.Light Detectors
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2- Introduce
- External photoelectric effect Electrons are
freed from the surface of a metal by the energy
absorbed from an incident stream of photons. - ex) vacuum photodiode, photomultiplier tube
- Internal photoelectric effect The detectors
are semiconductor junction devices in which free
charge carriers are generated by absorption of
incoming photons - ex) pn junction photodiode, PIN photodiode,
avalanche photodiode - Important detector properties are responsivity,
spectral response, and rise time.
3- Responsivity
- The responsive ?is the ratio of the output
current of the detector to its optic input power. - The units of responsivity are amperes per watt.
- Spectral response
- The spectral response refers to the curve of
detector responsivity as a function of
wavelength. - Rise time
- The rise time tr is the time for the detector
output current to change to change from 10 to 90
of its final value when the optic input power
variation is a step.
4- Vacuum photodiode
- A bias voltage is applied, making the anode
positive and the cathode negative. With no light,
the current passing through the load resistor is
zero and the output voltage is zero. - When the cathode is irradiated with light
incoming photons are absorbed, giving up their
energies to electrons in the metal. - Some of these electrons gain enough energy to
escape from the cathode. These free electrons
move toward the anode, attracted by its positive
charge. - Current flows through the circuit. When the
electrons strike the anode, they combine with the
positive charge and the circuit current stops.
Vacuum photodiode
5- Vacuum photodiode
- Work function To liberate a single electron
from the cathode requires a minimum amount of
energy. - Denoting the work function by F, the condition
for release of an electron is thus - The lowest optic frequency that can be detected
is f F/h. This corresponds to a wavelength of
?hc/ F. - If the work function is given in electron volts,
then the cutoff wavelength became
6- Vacuum photodiode
- Not every photon whose energy is greater than
the work function will liberate an electron. This
characteristic is described by the quantum
efficiency ? of the emitter. - The optic power is the energy per second being
delivered to the detector and hf is the energy
per photon, then P/hf is the number of photons
per second striking the cathode. - With quantum efficiency ? , the number of
emitted electrons per second is then ? P/hf.
7- Vacuum photodiode
- This is the current that flows through the load
resistor in the external circuit. The detector
behaves as if it were a current source for the
receiving circuit. - The responsivity is now
- The output voltage is
8- Photomultiplier tube (PMT)
- PMT has much greater responsivity than does the
photodiode because of an internal gain mechanism.
Electrons emitted from the cathode are
accelerated toward an electrode called a dynode. - The first dynode attracts electrons because it
is placed at a higher voltage than the cathode.
The electrons hitting the dynode have high
kinetic energies. They give up this energy,
causing the release of electrons from the dynode.
This process is called secondary emission. - Each dynode must be at a higher voltage than the
preceding one in order to attract the electrons.
Photomultiplier
9- Photomultiplier tube (PMT)
- The gain at each dynode is the number of
secondary electrons released per incident
electron. - Let us follow the progress of a single
photoemitted electron through the multiplier
tude. - If the gain at each dynode is d, then the number
of electrons emerging from the first dynode is
just d. The number of electrons in the tube after
the second dynode is d2. - When there are N dynode, the total gain is then
- The current through the external circuit is
10- pn diode
- When reverse bised, the potential energy barrier
between the p and n region increases. Free
electrons and free holes cannot climb the
barrier, it is called the depletion region. - An incident photon being absorbed in the
junction after passing through the p layer. The
absorbed energy raises a bound electron across
the bandgap from the valence to the conduction
band. A free hole is left in the valence to the
conduction band. - Free charge carriers are created by photon
absorption in this manner. The electron will
travel down the barrier, and the hole will travel
up the barrier. These moving charges cause
current flow through the external circuit. - Typical pn diodes have rise time of the order of
microseconds, making them unsuitable for
high-rate fiber systems.
11pn diode
Semiconductor junction photodiode
12- PIN photodiode
- The PIN diode has a wide intrinsic semiconductor
layer between the p and n regions. - The intrinsic layer has no free charges, so its
resistance is high, most of the diode voltage
appears across it, and the electrical forces are
strong within it. - Because the intrinsic layer is so wide, there is
a high probability that incoming photons will be
absorbed in it rather than in the thin p or n
regions. - This improves the efficiency and the speed
relative to the pn photodiode.
PIN photodiode
13- Cutoff wavelength
- To create an electron-hole pair, an incoming
photon must have enough energy to raise an
electron across the bandgap. This requirement,
- leads to a cutoff wavelength
- Materials
- Silicon is the most practical fiber optic
detector. It cannot be used in the
long-wavelength second window around 1.3 µm. - Germanium and InGaAs diodes introduce more noise
than silicon.
14Semiconductor PIN Photodiodes
Spectral response
15- Current-Voltage Characteristic
- The current-voltage characteristic curves for a
silicon diode having responsivity 0.5 A/W are
drawn in Fig. - When reverse biased, the diode is said to
operate in the photoconductive mode. In this mode
the output current is proportional to the optic
power. - When no reverse bias is provided, the figure
shows that incident optic power results in a
forward voltage. This is the photovoltaic mode. - Fiber communications detectors work in the
photoconductive mode.
Current-voltage characteristic curves for a
silicon photodetetor.
16- Current-Voltage Characteristic
- Even when there is no optic power present, a
small reverse current flows through a
reverse-biased diode. This is called the dark
current. Dark current is caused by the thermal
generation of free charge carriers in the diode. - It flows in all diodes, where it is
conventionally called the reverse leakage
current. - Generally, dark currents are lowest in silicon
detectors, somewhat larger in InGaAs diodes, and
largest in germanium diodes.
17- Current-Voltage Characteristic
- The simplest PIN receiving circuit is drawn in
Fig. The loop theorem (Kirch-hoffs voltage law)
states that the sum of the voltage around a
closed circuit must be zero. - 20 V battery, 1 MO load resister, load line has
a slope equal to -1/RL. It crosses the voltage
axis at VB(-20V), and it crosses the current
axis at VB/RL ( -20µA). A transfer
characteristic, showing the output voltage v as a
function of the input optic power, can easily be
developed from Fig (b).
(a) Simple PIN circuit (b) Graphical analysis
of the circuit
18- Current-Voltage Characteristic
- Following table summarizes some of the
calculations, and the transfer characteristic
appear in Fig
PIN photodetection circuit transfer function
Calculating the transfer characteristic of a PIN
photodiode
19- Speed of Response
- The speed of response is limited by the transit
time, the time it takes for free charges to
traverse the depletion layer. The velocity of the
free charge carriers is linearly proportional to
the magnitude of the reverse voltage, so higher
voltages reduce the transit time. - This is approximately the photodiode rise time.
Capacitance also limits the response. - For example, Cd is mainly the junction
capacitance. Following circuit reveals a 0-63
rise time of RLCd and a 10-90 rise time of - The corresponding 3-dB bandwidth can be
calculated directly from the circuit.
Equivalent circuit of a PIN photodiode
20- Current-to-Voltage Converter
- The diode voltage diminishes when the optic
power increases. This is because more current is
flowing, increasing the voltage across the load
resistor and leaving less of the battery voltage
for the diode. - The diode is connected to an operational
amplifier with a feedback resister RF. - 1. There is almost no voltage drop across the
input terminals of high-gain operational
amplifier. - 2. There is almost no current flowing into the
input terminals of the amplifier The entire diode
current flows through the feedback resister RF.
The voltage across this resister is RFid.
Current-to-voltage converter
Vertical load line seen by the diode In the
current-to-voltage converter
21- Avalanche photodiode (APD)
- The avalanche photodiode(APD) is a semiconductor
junction detector that has internal gain. Having
gain, the APD is similar to the photomultiplier
tube. - The gains that are available make APDs much more
sensitive than PIN diodes. - A photon is absorbed in the depletion region,
creating a free electron and a free hole. The
large electrical forces in the depletion region
cause these charges to accelerate, gaining
kinetic energy. When fast charges collide with
neutral atoms, they create additional
electron-hole. - One accelerating charge can generate several new
secondary charge. The second charge can
accelerate and create even more electron-hole
pairs.
22- Avalanche photodiode (APD)
- The accelerating forces must be strong to impart
high kinetic energies. This is achieved with
large reverse biases, several hundred volts in
some instances. - The gain increases with reverse bias vd
according to the approximation - where VBR is the diodes reverse breakdown
voltage and n is an empirically determined
parameter. Breakdown voltage of 20 to 500 V
occur. - The current generated by an APD with gain M is
23- Avalanche photodiode (APD)
- where ? is the quantum efficiency when the gain
is unity. - The responsivity is
Reach-through avalanche photodiode