Optical Detectors
Optical Detectors
hc
c A particular semiconductor material
can be used only over a limited
Eg wavelength range
pin energy-band diagram
hc 1.24
c μm Cut off wavelength depends on the
E g E g (eV ) bandgap energy
Cut off wavelength for Si is about 1.06 µm and for Ge it is 1.6 µm.
For longer wavelengths the photon energy is not sufficient to
excite an electron from the valence band to the conduction band.
Materials of construction
• The material used to make a photodiode is critical to defining its
properties, because only photons with sufficient energy to excite
electrons across the material's bandgap will produce significant
photocurrents.
• Materials commonly used to produce photodiodes include:
q
Ip
mA/mW
P0 h
hc
c Responsivity
Eg
=
Avalanche Photodiode
• More sophisticated structure than the PIN photodiode in order to create an
extremely high electric field region(app 3*105 V/cm).
• Internally multiplies the primary signal photocurrent.
Impact Ionization
• The photo generated carriers must traverse a region where a very high electric
field is present.
• In this region, a photogenerated hole or electron can gain enough energy to
excite new-electron hole pairs.
Avalanche Effect
• The newly created carriers are also accelerated by the high electric field, thus
gaining enough energy to cause further impact ionization.
• This phenomenon is the avalanche effect.
• Often requires high reverse bias voltages(50 to 400 V) in order that the new
carriers created can themselves produce additional carriers.
Reach Through Avalanche Photodiode
Reach Through Avalanche Photodiode(RAPD)
• Commonly used structure for achieving carrier multiplication with very little excess
noise.
• RAPD is composed of a high-resistivity p-type material deposited as an epitaxial
layer on a p+substrate followed by the construction of an n+ layer.
• The configuration is referred to as p+πpn+ reach-through structure.
• The π layer is the intrinsic layer with p doping.
• When a low reverse-bias voltage is applied, most of the potential drop is across
the pn+ junction.
• The depletion layer widens with increasing bias until a certain voltage is reached.
• At this voltage the peak electric field at the pn+ junction is about 5-10 percent
below that needed to cause avalanche breakdown.
• At this point , the depletion layer just “reaches through” to the nearly intrinsic π
region.
Reach Through Avalanche Photodiode(RAPD)
• Light enters the device through the n+ region and is absorbed in the π material.
• After being absorbed, the photon gives up its energy, thereby creating-electron-hole
pairs.
• The photogenerated electrons drift through the π region in the pn+ region, where a
high electric field exists where carrier multiplication takes place.
Ionization Rate
Average number of electron-hole pairs created by a carrier per unit distance travelled.
Electron ionization rate=α
Hole ionization rate= β
Ratio K= α/ β is a measure of the photodetector performance.
Reach Through Avalanche Photodiode(RAPD)
APD PIN M
Benefits and Drawbacks of avalanche photodiode’s
Benefits
• Detection of very low light levels often encountered in optical fiber
communications.
• Provide an increase in sensitivity between 5 and 15 dB over PIN photodiodes.
• Wider dynamic range.
Drawbacks
• Fabrication difficulties due to their more complex structure and hence
increased cost.
• Random nature of the gain mechanism which gives an additional noise
contribution.
• Often high bias voltages requires which are wavelength dependant.
• Temperature compensation is necessary to stabilize the operation of the
device.
Signal to Noise Ratio
Signal power from photocurrent
SNR
Detector Noise + Amplifier Noise
For high SNR
• The Photodetector must have a large quantum
efficiency (large responsivity or gain) to generate large
signal power
• Detector and amplifier noise must be low
I P I p ip
T /2
1
Lim T
2 2
i p i p (t ) dt
T T / 2
Quantum (Shot Noise)
Due to optical power fluctuation because light is made up of
discrete number of photons
i2
Q 2qI p BM F ( M ) 2
i2
T 4 K BTB / RL
i p2 M 2
SNR
2q( I p I D ) M 2 F ( M ) B 2qI L B 4k BTB / RL
Typically not all the noise terms will have equal weight.
For PIN photodiodes, the dominating noise currents are the Thermal noise
currents and the active elements of the amplifier circuitry.
For avalanche photodiodes, the thermal noise is of lesser importance and the
photodetector noises usually dominate.
Signal to Noise Ratio
Since the noise figure F(M) increases with M, there always exist an
optimum value of M that maximizes the SNR. For sinusoidally
modulated signal, the optimum value of M is given by