NANO AVALANCHE PHOTODIODE ARCHITECTURE FOR PHOTON DETECTION
20170194527 ยท 2017-07-06
Assignee
Inventors
- Narsingh B. Singh (Ellicott City, MD, US)
- John V. Veliadis (Hanover, MD, US)
- Bettina Nechay (Laurel, MD, US)
- Andre Berghmans (Owing Mills, MD, US)
- David J. Knuteson (Ellicott City, MD, US)
- David Kahler (Arbutus, MD, US)
- Brian Wagner (Baltimore, MD, US)
- Marc Sherwin (Catonsville, MD, US)
Cpc classification
H10F39/107
ELECTRICITY
H10F39/103
ELECTRICITY
H10F10/16
ELECTRICITY
H10F30/2255
ELECTRICITY
H10F77/413
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L31/107
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0232
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0336
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An integrated circuit includes a substrate material that includes an epitaxial layer, wherein the substrate material and the epitaxial layer form a first semiconductor material with the epitaxial layer having a first conductivity type. At least one nanowire comprising a second semiconductor material having a second conductivity type doped differently than the first conductivity type of the first semiconductor material forms a junction crossing region with the first semiconductor material. The nanowire and the first semiconductor material form an avalanche photodiode (APD) in the junction crossing region to enable single photon detection. In an alternative configuration, the APD is formed as a p-i-n crossing region where n represents an n-type material, i represents an intrinsic layer, and p represents a p-type material.
Claims
1. A method comprising: forming a substrate material; forming an epitaxial layer on the substrate material, wherein the substrate material and the epitaxial layer form a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity type; and forming at least one nanowire on the epitaxial layer, the at least one nanowire comprising a second semiconductor material having a second conductivity type doped differently than the first conductivity type of the first semiconductor material, wherein the at least one nanowire is formed on the epitaxial layer to run from a given edge of the first semiconductor material to an opposite edge of the semiconductor material to form a junction crossing region with the first semiconductor material, the at least one nanowire and the first semiconductor material forming an avalanche photodiode (APD) in the junction crossing region to enable single photon detection.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the first conductivity type is a p-type and the second conductivity type is an n-type or the first conductivity type is an n-type and the second conductivity type is a p-type.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein forming the at least one nanowire on the epitaxial layer comprises growing the at least one nanowire on the epitaxial layer via deposition or growing the at least one nanowire at a different location than the epitaxial layer and placing the at least one nanowire on the epitaxial layer after growth.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising forming a Bragg mirror above the substrate and below the epitaxial layer to increase detector sensitivity.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the APD forms a resonant cavity to increase photon detection sensitivity of the APD.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one nanowire is fabricated at about 2 to 100 nanometers in diameter and 5 to 250 nanometers in length.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein forming the at least one nanowire on the epitaxial layer comprises forming a plurality of nanowires on the epitaxial layer to form a plurality of junction crossing regions with the first semiconductor material in a given area of the epitaxial layer, wherein the plurality of junction crossing regions form an integrated circuit pixel for photon detection.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising forming a plurality of junction crossing regions with the first semiconductor material in respective areas of the epitaxial layer to form a plurality of integrated circuit pixels on the epitaxial layer to form a pixilated sensor array for photon detection.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is Silicon (Si) and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: Ge, InGaAs, InGaAs.sub.xP.sub.1-x, CdS, CdSe ZnS, and ZnSe to enable photon detection in the near infrared wavelength range , wherein x is a number greater than or equal to zero and where (Ge) is Germanium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (As) is Arsenic, (P) is Phosphorus, (Cd) is Cadmium, (Se) is Selenium, (Zn) is Zinc, and (S) is Sulfur.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is Si and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: PbS, PbSe, InSb, GaSb, CdS, CdSe, HgCdSe, HgCdS, and HgCdTe to enable photon detection in the medium or long infrared wavelength range, where (Pb) is Lead, (Sb) is Antimony, (Hg) is Mercury, (S) is sulfur, (Se) is Selenium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (Cd) is Cadmium, and (Te) is Tellurium.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is Si and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: PbSe.sub.xS.sub.1-x, Cd.sub.xHg.sub.1-xS, Pb.sub.xHg.sub.1-xS, CdSe.sub.xS.sub.1-x, As.sub.2S.sub.xSe.sub.5-x, GeSe.sub.xS.sub.yTe.sub.(1-x-y), CuAlS.sub.2-xSe.sub.x, As.sub.xSe.sub.1-xGe.sub.5, AgGaSe.sub.2GeSe.sub.2, and AgGaS.sub.2GeS.sub.2 to enable tunable wavelength characteristics, wherein x and y are numbers greater than or equal to zero and where (Cu) is Copper, (Al) is Aluminum, (As) is Arsenic, (Ge) is Germanium, (Pb) is Lead, (S) is sulfur, (Se) is Selenium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (Cd) is Cadmium, (Sb) is Antimony, (Hg) is Mercury and (Ag) is Silver.
12. A method of forming an integrated circuit comprising: forming a substrate; forming a first nanowire comprising a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity type on the substrate; forming an intrinsic layer over the first semiconductor material to increase photon sensitivity; and forming a second nanowire over the intrinsic layer, the second nanowire comprising a second semiconductor material having a second conductivity type doped differently than the first conductivity type of the first semiconductor material of the first nanowire and forming a junction crossing region with the first nanowire and the intrinsic layer, wherein the first nanowire, the intrinsic layer, and the second nanowire form an avalanche photodiode (APD) in the junction crossing region to enable single photon detection.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein forming the first nanowire comprises depositing along the substrate in a given direction a plurality nanometer beads of a given width and length relative to each other to connect the plurality of nanometer beads to form the first nanowire.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein depositing comprises one of metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOVCD) and molecular beam epitaxy (MBE).
15. The method of claim 13, wherein forming the second nanowire comprises depositing along a length of the first nanowire a plurality nanometer beads of a given width and length relative to each other to connect the plurality of nanometer beads to form the second nanowire.
16. The method of claim 12, further comprising forming a Bragg mirror over the substrate material to increase detector sensitivity.
17. The method of claim 12, wherein at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is Silicon (Si) and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: Ge, InGaAs, InGaAs.sub.xP.sub.1-x, CdS, CdSe ZnS, and ZnSe to enable photon detection in the near infrared wavelength range, wherein x is a number greater than or equal to zero and where (Ge) is Germanium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (As) is Arsenic, (P) is Phosphorus, (Cd) is Cadmium, (Se) is Selenium, (Zn) is Zinc, and (S) is Sulfur.
18. The method of claim 12, wherein at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is Si and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: PbS, PbSe, InSb, GaSb, CdS, CdSe, HgCdSe, HgCdS, and HgCdTe to enable photon detection in the medium or long infrared wavelength range where (Pb) is Lead, (Sb) is Antimony, (Hg) is Mercury, (S) is sulfur, (Se) is Selenium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (Cd) is Cadmium, and (Te) is Tellurium.
19. The method of claim 12, wherein at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is Si and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: PbSe.sub.xS.sub.1-x, Cd.sub.xHg.sub.1-xS, Pb.sub.xHg.sub.1-xS, CdSe.sub.xS.sub.1-x, As.sub.2S.sub.xSe.sub.5-x, GeSe.sub.xS.sub.yTe.sub.(1-x-y), CuAlS.sub.2-xSe.sub.x, As.sub.xSe.sub.1-xGe.sub.5, AgGaSe.sub.2GeSe.sub.2, and AgGaS.sub.2GeS.sub.2 to enable tunable wavelength characteristics, wherein x and y are numbers greater than or equal to zero and where (Cu) is Copper, (Al) is Aluminum, (As) is Arsenic, (Ge) is Germanium, (Pb) is Lead, (S) is sulfur, (Se) is Selenium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (Cd) is Cadmium, (Sb) is Antimony, (Hg) is Mercury and (Ag) is Silver.
20. The method of claim 12, wherein at least one of the first and second nanowires is fabricated at about 2 to 100 nanometers in diameter and 5 to 250 nanometers in length.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] This disclosure relates to nanowire avalanche photodiode (or nano-APD) configurations employed as photon detectors that support various applications. The nano-APD's can operate in very low-light conditions (e.g., single photon detection) with improved bandwidth while mitigating effects such as high dark currents that limit the performance of conventional detector configurations. The nano-APD can be constructed via semiconductor processing by crossing a semiconductor nanowire of one conductivity type (e.g., n-type conductivity) over a semiconductor nanowire of a different conductivity type (e.g., p-type conductivity) to form PN junctions. At the junctions of the nanowire crossing points of the materials, signal amplification can be achieved via the formation of avalanche photodiodes that can detect received photon energy. By forming a plurality of such crossing points in a given area on a semiconductor substrate, a pixel can be formed from the respective crossing points where each crossing point inside the pixel can potentially receive and detect photon energy. Having multiple crossing points inside of the pixel increases the sensitivity of the pixel detector and further improves signal-to-noise performance over conventional configurations. A plurality of such pixels can be formed on a semiconductor substrate providing an integrated circuit photon detector array, for example.
[0019] By utilizing crossed nanowires to create the avalanche photodiodes for the detector, other performance gains can be achieved. For example, nanowires provide reduced resistance and capacitance over conventional substrate signal paths. As such, reduced RC time constants can be achieved that enable a reduction in recovery time for passive quenching and in gated length for gated passive quenching which in turn lead to an increase in detector bandwidth and a minimization of dark count rate (DCR). The nano-APD configurations can be formed utilizing different materials that are tailored to the wavelength of the radiation to be detected. For example, one set of nanowire materials may be selected for detecting infrared (IR) radiation and another set of nanowire materials may be chosen for detecting short wavelength IR (SWIR) radiation, medium wavelength IR (MWIR) radiation, long wavelength IR (LWIR) radiation, and so forth. Such material selection enables further signal performance gains for a given imaging application.
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[0021] In some cases, the p-type material can form the bottom nanowire and the n-type material can form the top nanowire. In other cases, the semiconductor types can be reversed (e.g., p-type formed on top and n-type formed on bottom). In yet another example, rather than one of the materials being a nanowire, the crossing point and junction region 130 can be formed by the intersection of a nanowire and a substrate material having an epitaxial layer formed thereon. For example, if the material 120 were formed as a substrate material having an epitaxial layer, the APD junction 130 could be formed when the material 110 was deposited on top of the substrate 120 as a nanowire. In still yet another example, an intrinsic layer can be grown between the n-type and p-type materials to further improve sensitivity. For illustrative purposes, a single APD junction is described however a plurality of such junctions can be formed in a given area. As will be described and illustrated below, a plurality of APD junctions can be configured in a given unit area to form a pixel for detecting photons. A plurality of pixels can be fabricated to form a semiconductor detector for detecting photons.
[0022] The electrical transport and optical properties of nanowires are such that nano-APDs can be fabricated to achieve high sensitivity, single photon detection, and sub-wavelength resolution, for example. This can include crossed nanowire array-based nano-APDs which can reduce inter-pixel cross talk. The semiconductor materials can be fabricated by physical vapor deposition (PVD) and/or chemical vapor deposition (CVD) methods such as used for Ge, CdSe and other materials systems which are described below. The growth and control of the desired nanowire size and orientation can be accomplished by adjusting substrate temperature, fluid flow (nutrients) and the step growth process, for example. This process enables the fabrication of nanowires ranging from 2-100 nm in diameter and 5 to 250 nm in length, for example. Very high amplification in crossed nanowire structures can be achieved by employment of different APD configurations and then optimization of performance by utilizing resonant cavity enhanced APD structures, for example. In one specific example application, APD configurations allow for the realization of an advanced Laser RADAR (LADAR)-Radio Frequency Power Amplifier (RFPA). The APD configurations can include: APD detector arrays fabricated in nanowires and operating in the Geiger mode; APD bias and operating circuits with positive feedback; and multilevel digital logic for minimizing detector pixel size, for example. The LADAR-RFPA can be a hybrid APD detector array made of Ge, CdS or InGaAs nanowires, for example. The APD configurations can be readout hybridized with a pixel readout circuit fabricated in silicon, for example.
[0023] The detection of single photons of light via the APD PN junctions 130 can enable a wide range of emerging applications including communications, imaging with significant spatial resolution, quantum cryptography and single molecule fluorescence, for example. The nano-APDs based on at least one of the crossing materials being a nanowire can enable single photon detection with high spatial resolution, high multiplication gain, and bandwidth. Alternative configurations will be illustrated and described below based on nanowires involving integration of nanophotonics with nanoelectronics with application areas ranging from communications and computing to enhanced diagnostics.
[0024] As will be illustrated and described below, various integrated circuit configurations and material selections can be provided to enhance photon detection along with enabling tuning for reception of photons at various wavelengths. A first integrated circuit configuration (e.g., See
[0025] In a second integrated circuit configuration (e.g., See
[0026] The first conductivity type can be a p-type and the second conductivity type can be an n-type or the first conductivity type can be an n-type and the second conductivity type can be a p-type, for example. In the first configuration, the nanowire is grown on the epitaxial layer via deposition or grown at a different location than the epitaxial layer and placed on the epitaxial layer after growth. In the second configuration, nanowires can be grown or placed on the substrate and grown and/or placed to create the junction crossing regions 130. A Bragg mirror (See
[0027] Various material selections can be made to increase APD sensitivity and adjust the wavelengths for APD detection. In one example, at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials 110 or 120 is Silicon (Si) and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: (Ge), (InGaAs), (InGaAs.sub.xP.sub.1-x), (CdS), (CdSe), (ZnS), and (ZnSe) to enable photon detection in the near infrared wavelength, where x is a number greater than zero and less than or equal to one (including fractions) and where (Ge) is Germanium, (In) is Indium, (Ga) is Gallium, (As) is Arsenic, (P) is Phosphorus, (Cd) is Cadmium, (Se) is Selenium, (Zn) is Zinc, and (S) is Sulfur. In another example, at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials 110 or 120 is Si and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: PbS, PbSe, InSb, GaSb, CdS, CdSe, HgCdSe, HgCdS, and HgCdTe to enable photon detection in the medium or long infrared wavelength, where (Pb) is Lead, (Sb) is Antimony, (Hg) is Mercury, and (Te) is Tellurium. In yet another example, at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials110 or 120 is Si and at least one of the first or second semiconductor materials is selected from a group consisting of: PbSe.sub.xS.sub.1-x, Cd.sub.xHg.sub.1-xS, Pb.sub.xHg.sub.1-xS, CdSe.sub.xS.sub.1-x, As2SxSe5-x, GeSe.sub.xS.sub.yTe(.sub.1-x-y), CuAlS.sub.2-xSe.sub.x, As.sub.xSe.sub.1-xGe.sub.5, AgGaSe.sub.2GeSe.sub.2, and AgGaS.sub.2GeS.sub.2 to enable tunable wavelength characteristics, wherein x and y are numbers greater or equal to zero and less than or equal to one (including fractions) and where (Cu) is Copper, (Al) is Aluminum, and (Ag) is Gold. Silicon can be intrinsic or doped for example with elements including Boron (B), Arsenic (As), Gallium (Ga), or other suitable silicon dopant.
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[0029] The nanowires can be fabricated via deposition techniques where nanometer beads are deposited that form the cylindrical shapes of the wires. The larger the bead, the greater the diameter of the nanowire. Length of the nanowire can be controlled by moving the deposition dispenser for a given distance. Nanowires can be grown directly on the substrates and/or epitaxial layers described herein or they can alternatively be grown at a different location and placed on a substrate, epi-layer, or over top of another nanowire via nano-scale placement equipment. Any suitable technique for depositing nanowires or epitaxial layers can be employed such as metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOVCD), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) or other suitable deposition techniques.
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[0038] What have been described above are examples. It is, of course, not possible to describe every conceivable combination of components or methodologies, but one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that many further combinations and permutations are possible. Accordingly, the disclosure is intended to embrace all such alterations, modifications, and variations that fall within the scope of this application, including the appended claims. As used herein, the term includes means includes but not limited to, the term including means including but not limited to. The term based on means based at least in part on. Additionally, where the disclosure or claims recite a, an, a first, or another element, or the equivalent thereof, it should be interpreted to include one or more than one such element, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements.