Quantum well infrared photodetectors using II-VI material systems
09698286 ยท 2017-07-04
Assignee
- The Research Foundation Of The City University Of New York (New York, NY)
- The Trustees Of Princeton University (Princeton, NJ)
Inventors
- Arvind Ravikumar (Princeton, NJ, US)
- Claire Gmachl (Princeton, NJ, US)
- Aidong Shen (Rego Park, NY, US)
- Maria Tamargo (Teaneck, NJ, US)
Cpc classification
H10F30/288
ELECTRICITY
Y02E10/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
H01L31/0296
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0352
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/18
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A quantum well infrared photodetector (QWIP) and method of making is disclosed. The QWIP includes a plurality of epi-layers formed into multiple periods of quantum wells, each of the quantum wells being separated by a barrier, the quantum wells and barriers being formed of II-VI semiconductor materials. A multiple wavelength QWIP is also disclosed and includes a plurality of QWIPs stacked onto a single epitaxial structure, in which the different QWIPs are designed to respond at different wavelengths. A dual wavelength QWIP is also disclosed and includes two QWIPs stacked onto a single epitaxial structure, in which one QWIP is designed to respond at 10 m and the other at 3-5 m wavelengths.
Claims
1. A quantum well infrared photodetector (QWIP) comprising: a plurality of epi-layers formed into multiple periods of quantum wells, each of the quantum wells being separated by a barrier, an emitter contact layer formed above the quantum wells, and a collector contact layer formed below the quantum wells, the quantum wells, barriers, emitter contact layer, and collector contact layer being formed of II-VI semiconductor materials comprising zinc, cadmium, and selenium.
2. A multiple wavelength QWIP comprising a plurality of QWIPs of claim 1 stacked onto a single epitaxial structure, in which the different QWIPs are designed to respond at different wavelengths.
3. A dual wavelength QWIP comprising two QWIPs of claim 1 stacked onto a single epitaxial structure, in which one QWIP is designed to respond at 10 m and the other at 3-5 m wavelengths.
4. The QWIP of claim 1 wherein the II-VI semiconductor materials further comprise magnesium.
5. The QWIP of claim 1 comprising an active region grown on an InP substrate wherein the II-VI semiconductor materials comprise compositions that produce layers that are lattice-matched to the InP substrate.
6. The QWIP of claim 1 wherein the quantum wells comprise Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se.
7. The QWIP of claim 1 wherein the barriers comprise Zn.sub.0.45Cd.sub.0.42Mg.sub.0.13Se.
8. The QWIP of claim 1 wherein the barriers comprise Zn.sub.0.29Cd.sub.0.26Mg.sub.0.45Se.
9. The QWIP of claim 1 comprising an active region grown on an InP substrate.
10. The QWIP of claim 1 comprising an active region grown on InP substrate with a lattice-matched InGaAs buffer layer.
11. A method of making quantum well infrared photodetector (QWIP), the method comprising: forming a plurality of epi-layers formed into multiple periods of quantum wells; forming at least one barrier between the quantum wells; forming an emitter contact layer above the quantum wells; and forming a collector contact layer below the quantum wells, the quantum wells, barrier, emitter contact layer, and collector contact layer being formed of II-VI semiconductor materials comprising zinc, cadmium, and selenium.
12. The method of claim 11 further comprising forming a plurality of the QWIPs of claim 11 stacked onto a single epitaxial structure, in which the different QWIPs are designed to respond at different wavelengths.
13. The method of claim 11 further comprising forming dual wavelength QWIP comprised of two QWIPs of claim 11 stacked onto a single epitaxial structure, in which one QWIP is designed to respond at 10 m and the other at 3-5 m wavelengths.
14. The method of claim 11 wherein the II-VI semiconductor materials further comprise magnesium.
15. The method of claim 11 further comprising forming an active region grown on an InP substrate wherein the II-VI semiconductor materials comprise compositions that produce layers that are lattice-matched to the InP substrate.
16. The method of claim 11 wherein the quantum wells comprise Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se.
17. The method of claim 11 wherein the barriers comprise Zn.sub.0.45Cd.sub.0.42Mg.sub.0.13Se.
18. The method of claim 11 wherein the barriers comprise Zn.sub.0.29Cd.sub.0.26Mg.sub.0.45Se.
19. The method of claim 11 further comprising forming an active region grown on an InP substrate.
20. The method of claim 11 further comprising forming an active region grown on InP substrate with a lattice-matched InGaAs buffer layer.
21. A quantum well infrared photodetector (QWIP) comprising: a plurality of epi-layers formed into multiple periods of quantum wells, each of the quantum wells being separated by a barrier, an emitter contact layer formed below the quantum wells, and a collector contact layer formed above the quantum wells, the quantum wells, barriers, emitter contact layer, and collector contact layer being formed of II-VI semiconductor materials comprising zinc, cadmium, and selenium.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(24) Rather than the traditional III-V semiconductor material systems, devices using II-VI semiconductor material system are disclosed herein. For example, ZnCdSe/ZnCdMgSe system grown lattice matched to InP is a potential material for developing intersubband (ISB) devices, such as, for example, QWIPs. Combined with the dual advantage of a large conduction band offset (1.12 eV) and the absence of intervalley scattering, the ZnCdSe/ZnCdMgSe system is best suited for short-wavelength ISB devices. Furthermore, by adjusting the composition of the materials, the conduction band offset can also be tuned to any value in the range of 0 to 1.12 eV without introducing lattice mismatch, making it especially well-suited for ISB devices responding to a broad range of wavelengths. Compared to III-V materials, the II-VI compounds have a higher electron effective mass. While this reduces the strength of the optical dipole matrix element, it allows designs with thinner barrier layers to prevent tunneling. In effect, II-VI materials can accommodate more active stages than III-V materials for the same total thickness of the structure. Previous studies on this system have already demonstrated ISB absorption in multiple-quantum well (MQW) designs. There have also been recent reports on electroluminescence from ZnCdSe/ZnCdMgSe based Quantum Cascade emitter structures. Despite continued efforts in this direction, there have so far been no reports on QWIPs based on this material system. Disclosed herein is a QWIP based on a ZnCdSe/ZnCdMgSe quantum well structure.
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(26) When a quantum well is sufficiently deep and narrow, its energy states are quantized. The potential depth and width of the well are adjusted so that it holds only two energy states: a ground state near the well bottom 24, and a first excited state near the well top 22. A photon striking the well excites 34 an electron in the ground state to the first excited state. The electron in this excited state is swept out by an externally-applied voltage to produce a photocurrent 32. Only photons having energies corresponding to the energy separation between the two states are absorbed, resulting in a detector with a sharp absorption spectrum. Performance of the quantum well photodetectors depend on the amount of dark current shown generally by reference numbers 26-30. Dark current is generally the current that flows through a biased detector in the dark, i.e., with no photons impinging on it. There are generally a variety of sources for dark current in quantum well photodetectors. These include: sequential tunneling of ground state electrons from well to well 26, thermionic emission of ground state electrons toward the well top followed by tunneling through the barrier tip 28 into the energy continuum above the wells and barriers and thermionic emission of ground state electrons directly out of the well into the energy continuum 30.
(27) QWIP Design and Fabrication
(28) The QWIP was designed based on a bound-to-quasibound transition with a theoretical absorption maximum at 10.0 m. The quantum well states were computed within a one-band conduction band model approximation with an energy dependent effective mass that accounts for band mixing. The epi-layers consist of 50 periods of 41 Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se wells doped to 510.sup.18 cm.sup.3 separated by 150 Zn.sub.0.45Cd.sub.0.42Mg.sub.0.13Se barriers, grown lattice matched to a semi-insulating InP substrate by Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE). They were sandwiched between thick, highly doped ZnCdSe (Cl: 510.sup.18 cm.sup.3) top and bottom contacts with thickness 4000 and 8000 , respectively. Prior to the growth of the II-VI epi-layers, a 1500 InGaAs layer was deposited to prepare a uniform surface for subsequent II-VI growth.
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where is the wavelength of the x-ray (1.54056 for Cu K.sub..sup.1 line), is the Bragg angle of the substrate, and is the angular spacing between adjacent satellite peaks.
(30) The measured thickness of one period of the epi-layer was 201 , corresponding to a 5% deviation from the design. The wafer was processed into 310 m485 m rectangular mesas by conventional lithography and wet-chemical etching. Finally, Ti/Au (250 /3000 ) was evaporated for top and bottom contacts. The top contact has a window (300 m300 m) to allow for light absorption in Brewster angle geometry.
(31) QWIP Characterization
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(33) The performance of a QWIP is chiefly limited by the dark current.
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(35) The photocurrent was measured using a Daylight Solutions Inc. continuous wave Quantum Cascade laser tunable between 1000 cm.sup.1 and 1120 cm.sup.1, slightly off the peak absorption wavenumber of 1144 cm.sup.1. Similar to the photocurrent measurement, shifting the spectral measurement to 150 Hz greatly improves the signal-to-noise ratio by eliminating the DC dark current component.
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(37) The above examples demonstrate the development of a QWIP based on the II-VI ZnCdSe/ZnCdMgSe material system. Intersubband absorption spectra measured using an FTIR showed a broad peak centered around 8.7 m (FWHM 308 cm.sup.1), while the photocurrent spectrum was blue-shifted to 8.2 m (FWHM: 237 cm.sup.1). Photocurrent measurements using a Daylight Solutions Inc. laser indicated an exponential decay of the signal with increasing temperature. Coupled with the more than 4 orders of magnitude change in photocurrent with applied bias, we were able to achieve an operating temperature of 140 K by compensating degrading temperature performance with increasing applied bias.
(38) High Responsivity QWIP
(39) Also disclosed herein is a room temperature, high responsivity, short wavelength II-VI Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se/Zn.sub.0.29Cd.sub.0.26Mg.sub.0.45Se based quantum well infrared photodetector (QWIP) operating between 3 and 5 m. Spectral response was observed up to room temperature with a cut off wavelength of 5 m at 280 K. Measurements with a calibrated blackbody source yielded a peak responsivity of over 30 A/W at 280 K and an applied bias of 3 V. The dark current limited peak detectivity at 80 K and 280 K were measured to be 210.sup.9 cmHz/W and 410.sup.7 cmHz/W, respectively. These results are consistent with theoretical calculations that predict a maximum detectivity of the order of 10.sup.7 cmHz/W at room temperature for typical carrier lifetimes and optimized doping levels.
(40) The example disclosed above is directed to a long wavelength (10 m) QWIP from this material system that operated up to 140 K. The performance was limited due to a relatively large dark current and lower gain. In the following example, a short wavelength (3-5 m) QWIP is disclosed operating at room temperature with a high responsivity of over 30 A/W. This comparatively high value is the result of a large photoconductive gain arising from a low capture probability, and has been independently verified by both direct measurements of responsivity, and gain extracted from noise characteristics.
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(42) The active region consisted of 50 periods of 21 Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se wells doped to 310.sup.18 cm.sup.3 separated by 250 of undoped Zn.sub.0.29Cd.sub.0.26Mg.sub.0.45Se barriers, sandwiched between two highly doped (Cl: 310.sup.18 cm.sup.3) Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se contact layers, the emitter (top) and the collector (bottom), with thicknesses of 400 nm and 800 nm, respectively. The active region was grown on semi-insulating InP by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). Prior to the growth of the II-VI epi-layers, a 1500 InGaAs layer was deposited to prepare a uniform surface for subsequent II-VI growth. X-ray diffraction measurements (Bruker D8-Discover) yielded a period thickness of 270 , in excellent agreement with the designed period of 271 . The wafers were processed into 310485 m rectangular mesas by standard lithography and wet-etching techniques. Top and bottom contacts of Ti/Au (200 /2000 ) were deposited by e-beam evaporation and a subsequent lift-off process. The top contact has a window of 300300 m for light absorption. Processed wafers were mounted on copper heat sinks and wire bonded.
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(44) The detectivity (D*) of a QWIP is chiefly limited by the dark current noise.
(45) Responsivity measurements were carried out using a calibrated black body source at 900 K and the device was placed in a variable temperature cryostat in 300 K background.
(46) The dark current noise of the detector was measured using a spectrum analyzer and a low noise current preamplifier, with the device mounted inside a cryo-shield to prevent shot noise generation from background radiation.
(47) As expected, this reduction in D* is a result of the increase in the noise current with temperature. However, D* does not decrease as rapidly (about 2 orders of magnitude reduction from 80 K to 280 K) because of a correspondingly significant increase in responsivity in the same temperature range. This increase can be attributed to increased photoconductive gain at higher temperatures. It has been previously demonstrated.sup.25 that the noise gain is equal to the photoconductive gain in QWIPs in the limit of unity carrier escape probability, which would be satisfied at room temperature and high applied bias. Estimates of this photoconductive gain made from dark current noise measurements at 280 K resulted in value greater than 1000 cm.sup.1 for applied bias greater than 0.3 V. Concurrently, the capture probability of the electron above the barrier was found to be very close to zero.
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(49) The D* has been calculated using the relation.sup.26,
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where is the wavelength, h is the Planck's constant, c is the speed of light, is the total absorption efficiency, N is the number of periods, .sub.c is the carrier lifetime, N.sub.3D is the above barrier electron density and L.sub.p is the length of one period of the active region. It is important to note that this theoretical D* involves assumptions about the above barrier electron density, absorption efficiency and carrier lifetimes, and therefore only an order of magnitude comparison would be valid. Assuming a total absorption efficiency of 10%, a carrier lifetime of 5 ps and estimating the above barrier electron density from a 3D carrier drift model.sup.26 using the expression,
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(52) where m.sub.b is the electron effective mass in the barrier, k.sub.B is the Boltzmann constant, T is the temperature, .sub.c is the cut-off wavelength, and E.sub.F is the 2-D Fermi level in the quantum well, the maximum D* at 290 K is found to be about 10.sup.7 cmHz/W, in reasonable agreement with the value obtained from our device 410.sup.7 cmHz/W at 280 K. However, the measured D* at 80 K is significantly lower than the theoretical estimate of about 10.sup.13 cm/Hz/W. This is likely due to the overestimation of absorption efficiency and a non-optimized doping level.
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(56) In conclusion, disclosed herein are short wavelength II-VI Zn.sub.0.51Cd.sub.0.49Se/Zn.sub.0.29Cd.sub.0.26Mg.sub.0.45Se based QWIP operating between 3 and 5 m. Room temperature photoresponse was observed, with a peak responsivity of over 30 A/W at 280 K. Dark current limited detectivity of 210.sup.9 cmHz/W and 410.sup.7 cmHz/W were measured at 80 K and 280 K respectively. These results closely agree with theoretical calculations that predict a maximum D* of 10.sup.7 cm/Hz/W at 290 K.
(57) The references listed herein are also part of the application and are incorporated by reference in their entirety as if fully set forth herein including: Ravikumar et al. Room Temperature and High Responsivity Short Wavelength II-VI Quantum Well Infrared Photodetector Conference on Lasers and Electro Optics (CLEO) San Jose, Calif., 2013; Ravikumar et al. Room temperature and high responsivity short wavelength II-VI quantum well infrared photodetector Appl. Phys. Lett. 102, 161107 (2013); Shen et al. MBE growth of ZnCdSe/ZnCdMgSe quantum-well infrared photodetectors J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 31(3), May/June 2013, 03C113-1-03C113-3. It should be understood that many variations are possible based on the disclosure herein. Although features and elements are described above in particular combinations, each feature or element can be used alone without the other features and elements or in various combinations with or without other features and elements.