Optical Sources - BYU -- ECEn 466 Course Information
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Transcript Optical Sources - BYU -- ECEn 466 Course Information
Semiconductor Optical Detectors
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
1
Semiconductor Optical Detectors
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Inverse device with semiconductor lasers
– Source: convert electric current to optical power
– Detector: convert optical power to electrical current
Use pin structures similar to lasers
Electrical power is proportional to i2
– Electrical power is proportional to optical power squared
– Called square law device
Important characteristics
– Modulation bandwidth (response speed)
– Optical conversion efficiency
– Noise
– Area
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
2
p-n Diode
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p-n junction has a space charge region at the interface of the two material
types
This region is depleted of most carriers
A photon generates an electron-hole pair in this region that moves rapidly at
the drift velocity by the electric field
An electron-hole pair generated outside the depletion region they move by
diffusion at a much slower rate
Junction is typically reversed biased to increase the width of the depletion
region
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
3
p-n Diode
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
4
Semiconductor pin Detector
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Intrinsic layer is introduced
– Increase the space charge region
– Minimize the diffusion current
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
5
I-V Characteristic of Reversed Biased pin
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Photocurrent increases with incident optical power
Dark current, Id: current with no incident optical power
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
6
Light Absorption
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Dominant interaction
– Photon absorbed
– Electron is excited to CB
– Hole left in the VB
Depends on the energy band gap
(similar to lasers)
Absorption (a) requires the photon
energy to be smaller than the
material band gap
hc
Eg
hc
1.24
m)
Eg Eg eV )
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
7
Quantum Efficiency
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Probability that photon generates an electron-hole pair
Absorption requires
– Photon gets into the depletion region
– Be absorbed
Reflection off of the surface
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Photon absorbed before it gets to the depletion region
1 R)
ea l
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Photon gets absorbed in the depletion region
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Fraction of incident photons that are absorbed
1 ea d )
1 R) ea l 1 ea d )
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
8
Detector Responsivity
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Each absorbed photon generates an electron hole pair
Iph = (Number of absorbed photons) * (charge of electron)
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Rate of incident photons depends on
– Incident optical power Pinc
– Energy of the photon Ephoton= hf
Generated current
q
I ph Pinc
hf
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Detector responsivity
– Current generated per unit optical power
q
AW
hf
1.24
in units of m
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
9
Responsivity
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Depends on quantum efficiency , and photon energy
q
AW
hf
1.24
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
10
Minimum Detectable Power
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Important detector Specifications
– Responsivity
– Noise Equivalent noise power in or noise
equivalent power NEP
– Often grouped into minimum detectable
power Pmin at a specific data rate
• Pmin scales with data rate
Common InGaAs pin photodetector
– Pmin=-22 dBm @B=2.5 Gbps, BER=10-10
Common InGaAs APD
– Pmin=-32 dBm @B=2.5 Gbps, BER=10-10
– Limited to around B=2.5 Gbps
Stephen Schultz
Fiber Optics
Fall 2005
11