Several applications utilizing either synchrotron or conventional light sources require fast and efficient pixelated detectors. In order to cover a wide range of experiments, this work investigates the possibility to use InGaAs/InAlAs quantum well devices as photon detectors for a broad range of energies. Owing to their direct, low-energy band gap and high electron mobility, such devices may be used also at room temperature as multi-wavelength sensors from visible light to hard X-rays. Furthermore, internal charge-amplification mechanism can be applied for very low signal levels, while the high carrier mobility allows the design of very fast photon detectors with sub-nanosecond response times. Samples were grown by solid source molecular beam epitaxy on GaAs substrates. Metamorphic In0:75Ga0:25As/ In0:75Al0:25As heterostructures were obtained by relaxing the strain due to the lattice mismatch in the substrate by means of a composition-graded buffer layer. A twodimensional electron gas forming in an In0:75Ga0:25As quantum well is sandwiched between In0:75Al0:25As barriers and is modulation-doped by a Si d on its top. The samples have been pixelated by using standard photolithographic techniques. In order to fit commercially available readout chips, a pixelated sensor with pixel size of 172 172mm2 is currently under development. A small-scale version of the pixelated quantum well sensor has been preliminary tested with 100-fs-wide laser pulses and X-ray synchrotron radiation. The reported results indicate that these sensors respond with 100-ps rise-times to ultra-fast laser pulses. Synchrotron X-ray tests show how these devices exhibit high charge collection efficiencies, which can be imputed to the chargemultiplication effect of the 2D electron gas inside the well.

Fast, multi-wavelength, efficiency-enhanced pixelated devices based on InGaAs/InAlAs quantum-well

Biasiol G;Cucini R;
2015

Abstract

Several applications utilizing either synchrotron or conventional light sources require fast and efficient pixelated detectors. In order to cover a wide range of experiments, this work investigates the possibility to use InGaAs/InAlAs quantum well devices as photon detectors for a broad range of energies. Owing to their direct, low-energy band gap and high electron mobility, such devices may be used also at room temperature as multi-wavelength sensors from visible light to hard X-rays. Furthermore, internal charge-amplification mechanism can be applied for very low signal levels, while the high carrier mobility allows the design of very fast photon detectors with sub-nanosecond response times. Samples were grown by solid source molecular beam epitaxy on GaAs substrates. Metamorphic In0:75Ga0:25As/ In0:75Al0:25As heterostructures were obtained by relaxing the strain due to the lattice mismatch in the substrate by means of a composition-graded buffer layer. A twodimensional electron gas forming in an In0:75Ga0:25As quantum well is sandwiched between In0:75Al0:25As barriers and is modulation-doped by a Si d on its top. The samples have been pixelated by using standard photolithographic techniques. In order to fit commercially available readout chips, a pixelated sensor with pixel size of 172 172mm2 is currently under development. A small-scale version of the pixelated quantum well sensor has been preliminary tested with 100-fs-wide laser pulses and X-ray synchrotron radiation. The reported results indicate that these sensors respond with 100-ps rise-times to ultra-fast laser pulses. Synchrotron X-ray tests show how these devices exhibit high charge collection efficiencies, which can be imputed to the chargemultiplication effect of the 2D electron gas inside the well.
2015
Istituto Officina dei Materiali - IOM -
APDS
Beam-intensity monitors
Beam-line instrumentation (beam position and profile monitors
Bunch length monitors)
CCDS
DIODES
EBCCDS
EMCCDSRTC
G-APDS
Photon detectors for UV
Photon detectors for UV
PIN
SI-PMTS
Visible and IR photons (Solid-state)
Visible and IR photons (solid-state)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/313839
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