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Photodetector

Photodetectors, also called photosensors, are sensors of light or other electromagnetic radiation.[1] There are a wide variety of photodetectors which may be classified by mechanism of detection, such as photoelectric or photochemical effects, or by various performance metrics, such as spectral response. Semiconductor-based photodetectors typically use a p–n junction that converts photons into charge. The absorbed photons make electron–hole pairs in the depletion region. Photodiodes and photo transistors are a few examples of photo detectors. Solar cells convert some of the light energy absorbed into electrical energy.

A photodetector salvaged from a CD-ROM drive. The photodetector contains three photodiodes, visible in the photo (in center).

Classification edit

Photodetectors can be classified based on their mechanism of operation and device structure. Here are the common classifications:

Based on mechanism of operation edit

 
A commercial amplified photodetector for use in optics research

Photodetectors may be classified by their mechanism for detection:[2][unreliable source?][3][4]

  • Photoconductive effect: These detectors work by changing their electrical conductivity when exposed to light. The incident light generates electron-hole pairs in the material, altering its conductivity. Photoconductive detectors are typically made of semiconductors.[5]
  • Photoemission or photoelectric effect: Photons cause electrons to transition from the conduction band of a material to free electrons in a vacuum or gas.
  • Thermal: Photons cause electrons to transition to mid-gap states then decay back to lower bands, inducing phonon generation and thus heat.
  • Polarization: Photons induce changes in polarization states of suitable materials, which may lead to change in index of refraction or other polarization effects.
  • Photochemical: Photons induce a chemical change in a material.
  • Weak interaction effects: photons induce secondary effects such as in photon drag[6][7] detectors or gas pressure changes in Golay cells.

Photodetectors may be used in different configurations. Single sensors may detect overall light levels. A 1-D array of photodetectors, as in a spectrophotometer or a Line scanner, may be used to measure the distribution of light along a line. A 2-D array of photodetectors may be used as an image sensor to form images from the pattern of light before it.

A photodetector or array is typically covered by an illumination window, sometimes having an anti-reflective coating.

Based on device structure edit

Based on device structure, photodetectors can be classified into the following categories:

  1. MSM Photodetector: A metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) photodetector consists of a semiconductor layer sandwiched between two metal electrodes. The metal electrodes are interdigitated, forming a series of alternating fingers or grids. The semiconductor layer is typically made of materials such as silicon (Si), gallium arsenide (GaAs), indium phosphide (InP) or antimony selenide (Sb2Se3).[5] Various methods are employed together to improve its characteristics, such as manipulating the vertical structure, etching, changing the substrate, and utilizing plasmonics.[8] The best achievable efficiency is shown by Antimony Selenide photodetectors.
  2. Photodiodes: Photodiodes are the most common type of photodetectors. They are semiconductor devices with a PN junction. Incident light generates electron-hole pairs in the depletion region of the junction, producing a photocurrent. Photodiodes can be further categorized into: a. PIN Photodiodes: These photodiodes have an additional intrinsic (I) region between the P and N regions, which extends the depletion region and improves the device's performance. b. Schottky Photodiodes: In Schottky photodiodes, a metal-semiconductor junction is used instead of a PN junction. They offer high-speed response and are commonly used in high-frequency applications.
  3. Avalanche Photodiodes (APDs): APDs are specialized photodiodes that incorporate avalanche multiplication. They have a high electric field region near the PN junction, which causes impact ionization and produces additional electron-hole pairs. This internal amplification improves the detection sensitivity. APDs are widely used in applications requiring high sensitivity, such as low-light imaging and long-distance optical communication.[9]
  4. Phototransistors: Phototransistors are transistors with a light-sensitive base region. Incident light causes a change in the base current, which controls the transistor's collector current. Phototransistors offer amplification and can be used in applications that require both detection and signal amplification.
  5. Charge-Coupled Devices (CCDs): CCDs are imaging sensors composed of an array of tiny capacitors. Incident light generates charge in the capacitors, which is sequentially read and processed to form an image. CCDs are commonly used in digital cameras and scientific imaging applications.
  6. CMOS Image Sensors (CIS): CMOS image sensors are based on complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology. They integrate photodetectors and signal processing circuitry on a single chip. CMOS image sensors have gained popularity due to their low power consumption, high integration, and compatibility with standard CMOS fabrication processes.
  7. Photomultiplier Tubes (PMTs): PMTs are vacuum tube-based photodetectors. They consist of a photocathode that emits electrons when illuminated, followed by a series of dynodes that multiply the electron current through secondary emission. PMTs offer high sensitivity and are used in applications that require low-light detection, such as particle physics experiments and scintillation detectors.

These are some of the common photodetectors based on device structure. Each type has its own characteristics, advantages, and applications in various fields, including imaging, communication, sensing, and scientific research.

Properties edit

There are a number of performance metrics, also called figures of merit, by which photodetectors are characterized and compared[2][3]

  • Quantum efficiency: The number of carriers (electrons or holes) generated per photon.
  • Responsivity: The output current divided by total light power falling upon the photodetector.
  • Noise-equivalent power: The amount of light power needed to generate a signal comparable in size to the noise of the device.
  • Detectivity: The square root of the detector area divided by the noise equivalent power.
  • Gain: The output current of a photodetector divided by the current directly produced by the photons incident on the detectors, i.e., the built-in current gain.
  • Dark current: The current flowing through a photodetector even in the absence of light.
  • Response time: The time needed for a photodetector to go from 10% to 90% of final output.
  • Noise spectrum: The intrinsic noise voltage or current as a function of frequency. This can be represented in the form of a noise spectral density.
  • Nonlinearity: The RF-output is limited by the nonlinearity of the photodetector[10]
  • Spectral response: The response of a photodetector as a function of photon frequency.

Subtypes edit

Grouped by mechanism, photodetectors include the following devices:

Photoemission or photoelectric edit

Semiconductor edit

Photovoltaic edit

Thermal edit

  • Bolometers measure the power of incident electromagnetic radiation via the heating of a material with a temperature-dependent electrical resistance. A microbolometer is a specific type of bolometer used as a detector in a thermal camera.
  • Cryogenic detectors are sufficiently sensitive to measure the energy of single x-ray, visible and infrared photons.[18]
  • Pyroelectric detectors detect photons through the heat they generate and the subsequent voltage generated in pyroelectric materials.
  • Thermopiles detect electromagnetic radiation through heat, then generating a voltage in thermocouples.
  • Golay cells detect photons by the heat they generate in a gas-filled chamber, causing the gas to expand and deform a flexible membrane whose deflection is measured.

Photochemical edit

Polarization edit

Graphene/silicon photodetectors edit

A graphene/n-type silicon heterojunction has been demonstrated to exhibit strong rectifying behavior and high photoresponsivity. Graphene is coupled with silicon quantum dots (Si QDs) on top of bulk Si to form a hybrid photodetector. Si QDs cause an increase of the built-in potential of the graphene/Si Schottky junction while reducing the optical reflection of the photodetector. Both the electrical and optical contributions of Si QDs enable a superior performance of the photodetector.[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Haugan, H. J.; Elhamri, S.; Szmulowicz, F.; Ullrich, B.; Brown, G. J.; Mitchel, W. C. (2008). "Study of residual background carriers in midinfrared InAs/GaSb superlattices for uncooled detector operation". Applied Physics Letters. 92 (7): 071102. Bibcode:2008ApPhL..92g1102H. doi:10.1063/1.2884264. S2CID 39187771.
  2. ^ a b Donati, S. "Photodetectors" (PDF). unipv.it. Prentice Hall. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  3. ^ a b Yotter, R.A.; Wilson, D.M. (June 2003). "A review of photodetectors for sensing light-emitting reporters in biological systems". IEEE Sensors Journal. 3 (3): 288–303. Bibcode:2003ISenJ...3..288Y. doi:10.1109/JSEN.2003.814651.
  4. ^ Stöckmann, F. (May 1975). "Photodetectors, their performance and their limitations". Applied Physics. 7 (1): 1–5. Bibcode:1975ApPhy...7....1S. doi:10.1007/BF00900511. S2CID 121425624.
  5. ^ a b Singh, Yogesh; Kumar, Manoj; Yadav, Reena; Kumar, Ashish; Rani, Sanju; Shashi; Singh, Preetam; Husale, Sudhir; Singh, V. N. (2022-08-15). "Enhanced photoconductivity performance of microrod-based Sb2Se3 device". Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells. 243: 111765. doi:10.1016/j.solmat.2022.111765. ISSN 0927-0248.
  6. ^ A. Grinberg, Anatoly; Luryi, Serge (1 July 1988). "Theory of the photon-drag effect in a two-dimensional electron gas". Physical Review B. 38 (1): 87–96. Bibcode:1988PhRvB..38...87G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.38.87. PMID 9945167.
  7. ^ Bishop, P.; Gibson, A.; Kimmitt, M. (October 1973). "The performance of photon-drag detectors at high laser intensities". IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics. 9 (10): 1007–1011. Bibcode:1973IJQE....9.1007B. doi:10.1109/JQE.1973.1077407.
  8. ^ Singh, Yogesh; Parmar, Rahul; Srivastava, Avritti; Yadav, Reena; Kumar, Kapil; Rani, Sanju; Shashi; Srivastava, Sanjay K.; Husale, Sudhir; Sharma, Mahesh; Kushvaha, Sunil Singh; Singh, Vidya Nand (2023-06-16). "Highly Responsive Near-Infrared Si/Sb 2 Se 3 Photodetector via Surface Engineering of Silicon". ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 15 (25): 30443–30454. doi:10.1021/acsami.3c04043. ISSN 1944-8244.
  9. ^ Stillman, G. E.; Wolfe, C. M. (1977-01-01), Willardson, R. K.; Beer, Albert C. (eds.), Chapter 5 Avalanche Photodiodes**This work was sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and by the Department of the Air Force., Semiconductors and Semimetals, vol. 12, Elsevier, pp. 291–393, retrieved 2023-05-11
  10. ^ Hu, Yue (1 October 2014). "Modeling sources of nonlinearity in a simple pin photodetector". Journal of Lightwave Technology. 32 (20): 3710–3720. Bibcode:2014JLwT...32.3710H. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.670.2359. doi:10.1109/JLT.2014.2315740. S2CID 9882873.
  11. ^ "Photo Detector Circuit". oscience.info.
  12. ^ Pearsall, Thomas (2010). . McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-162935-5. Archived from the original on 2021-08-17. Retrieved 2021-02-24.
  13. ^ Paschotta, Dr. Rüdiger. "Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology - photodetectors, photodiodes, phototransistors, pyroelectric photodetectors, array, powermeter, noise". www.rp-photonics.com. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  14. ^ "PDA10A(-EC) Si Amplified Fixed Gain Detector User Manual" (PDF). Thorlabs. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  15. ^ "DPD80 760nm Datasheet". Resolved Instruments. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  16. ^ Fossum, E. R.; Hondongwa, D. B. (2014). "A Review of the Pinned Photodiode for CCD and CMOS Image Sensors". IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society. 2 (3): 33–43. doi:10.1109/JEDS.2014.2306412.
  17. ^ "Silicon Drift Detectors" (PDF). tools.thermofisher.com. Thermo Scientific.
  18. ^ Enss, Christian, ed. (2005). Cryogenic Particle Detection. Springer, Topics in applied physics 99. ISBN 978-3-540-20113-7.
  19. ^ Yuan, Hongtao; Liu, Xiaoge; Afshinmanesh, Farzaneh; Li, Wei; Xu, Gang; Sun, Jie; Lian, Biao; Curto, Alberto G.; Ye, Guojun; Hikita, Yasuyuki; Shen, Zhixun; Zhang, Shou-Cheng; Chen, Xianhui; Brongersma, Mark; Hwang, Harold Y.; Cui, Yi (1 June 2015). "Polarization-sensitive broadband photodetector using a black phosphorus vertical p–n junction". Nature Nanotechnology. 10 (8): 707–713. arXiv:1409.4729. Bibcode:2015NatNa..10..707Y. doi:10.1038/nnano.2015.112. PMID 26030655.
  20. ^ Yu, Ting; Wang, Feng; Xu, Yang; Ma, Lingling; Pi, Xiaodong; Yang, Deren (2016). "Graphene Coupled with Silicon Quantum Dots for High-Performance Bulk-Silicon-Based Schottky-Junction Photodetectors". Advanced Materials. 28 (24): 4912–4919. doi:10.1002/adma.201506140. PMID 27061073. S2CID 205267070.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Optical sensors at Wikimedia Commons

photodetector, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, january, 2020, also, called, photosensors, sensors, light, other, electromagnetic,. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2020 Photodetectors also called photosensors are sensors of light or other electromagnetic radiation 1 There are a wide variety of photodetectors which may be classified by mechanism of detection such as photoelectric or photochemical effects or by various performance metrics such as spectral response Semiconductor based photodetectors typically use a p n junction that converts photons into charge The absorbed photons make electron hole pairs in the depletion region Photodiodes and photo transistors are a few examples of photo detectors Solar cells convert some of the light energy absorbed into electrical energy A photodetector salvaged from a CD ROM drive The photodetector contains three photodiodes visible in the photo in center Contents 1 Classification 1 1 Based on mechanism of operation 1 2 Based on device structure 2 Properties 3 Subtypes 3 1 Photoemission or photoelectric 3 2 Semiconductor 3 3 Photovoltaic 3 4 Thermal 3 5 Photochemical 3 6 Polarization 3 7 Graphene silicon photodetectors 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksClassification editPhotodetectors can be classified based on their mechanism of operation and device structure Here are the common classifications Based on mechanism of operation edit nbsp A commercial amplified photodetector for use in optics research Photodetectors may be classified by their mechanism for detection 2 unreliable source 3 4 Photoconductive effect These detectors work by changing their electrical conductivity when exposed to light The incident light generates electron hole pairs in the material altering its conductivity Photoconductive detectors are typically made of semiconductors 5 Photoemission or photoelectric effect Photons cause electrons to transition from the conduction band of a material to free electrons in a vacuum or gas Thermal Photons cause electrons to transition to mid gap states then decay back to lower bands inducing phonon generation and thus heat Polarization Photons induce changes in polarization states of suitable materials which may lead to change in index of refraction or other polarization effects Photochemical Photons induce a chemical change in a material Weak interaction effects photons induce secondary effects such as in photon drag 6 7 detectors or gas pressure changes in Golay cells Photodetectors may be used in different configurations Single sensors may detect overall light levels A 1 D array of photodetectors as in a spectrophotometer or a Line scanner may be used to measure the distribution of light along a line A 2 D array of photodetectors may be used as an image sensor to form images from the pattern of light before it A photodetector or array is typically covered by an illumination window sometimes having an anti reflective coating Based on device structure edit Based on device structure photodetectors can be classified into the following categories MSM Photodetector A metal semiconductor metal MSM photodetector consists of a semiconductor layer sandwiched between two metal electrodes The metal electrodes are interdigitated forming a series of alternating fingers or grids The semiconductor layer is typically made of materials such as silicon Si gallium arsenide GaAs indium phosphide InP or antimony selenide Sb2Se3 5 Various methods are employed together to improve its characteristics such as manipulating the vertical structure etching changing the substrate and utilizing plasmonics 8 The best achievable efficiency is shown by Antimony Selenide photodetectors Photodiodes Photodiodes are the most common type of photodetectors They are semiconductor devices with a PN junction Incident light generates electron hole pairs in the depletion region of the junction producing a photocurrent Photodiodes can be further categorized into a PIN Photodiodes These photodiodes have an additional intrinsic I region between the P and N regions which extends the depletion region and improves the device s performance b Schottky Photodiodes In Schottky photodiodes a metal semiconductor junction is used instead of a PN junction They offer high speed response and are commonly used in high frequency applications Avalanche Photodiodes APDs APDs are specialized photodiodes that incorporate avalanche multiplication They have a high electric field region near the PN junction which causes impact ionization and produces additional electron hole pairs This internal amplification improves the detection sensitivity APDs are widely used in applications requiring high sensitivity such as low light imaging and long distance optical communication 9 Phototransistors Phototransistors are transistors with a light sensitive base region Incident light causes a change in the base current which controls the transistor s collector current Phototransistors offer amplification and can be used in applications that require both detection and signal amplification Charge Coupled Devices CCDs CCDs are imaging sensors composed of an array of tiny capacitors Incident light generates charge in the capacitors which is sequentially read and processed to form an image CCDs are commonly used in digital cameras and scientific imaging applications CMOS Image Sensors CIS CMOS image sensors are based on complementary metal oxide semiconductor CMOS technology They integrate photodetectors and signal processing circuitry on a single chip CMOS image sensors have gained popularity due to their low power consumption high integration and compatibility with standard CMOS fabrication processes Photomultiplier Tubes PMTs PMTs are vacuum tube based photodetectors They consist of a photocathode that emits electrons when illuminated followed by a series of dynodes that multiply the electron current through secondary emission PMTs offer high sensitivity and are used in applications that require low light detection such as particle physics experiments and scintillation detectors These are some of the common photodetectors based on device structure Each type has its own characteristics advantages and applications in various fields including imaging communication sensing and scientific research Properties editThere are a number of performance metrics also called figures of merit by which photodetectors are characterized and compared 2 3 Quantum efficiency The number of carriers electrons or holes generated per photon Responsivity The output current divided by total light power falling upon the photodetector Noise equivalent power The amount of light power needed to generate a signal comparable in size to the noise of the device Detectivity The square root of the detector area divided by the noise equivalent power Gain The output current of a photodetector divided by the current directly produced by the photons incident on the detectors i e the built in current gain Dark current The current flowing through a photodetector even in the absence of light Response time The time needed for a photodetector to go from 10 to 90 of final output Noise spectrum The intrinsic noise voltage or current as a function of frequency This can be represented in the form of a noise spectral density Nonlinearity The RF output is limited by the nonlinearity of the photodetector 10 Spectral response The response of a photodetector as a function of photon frequency Subtypes editGrouped by mechanism photodetectors include the following devices Photoemission or photoelectric edit Gaseous ionization detectors are used in experimental particle physics to detect photons and particles with sufficient energy to ionize gas atoms or molecules Electrons and ions generated by ionization cause a current flow which can be measured Photomultiplier tubes containing a photocathode which emits electrons when illuminated the electrons are then amplified by a chain of dynodes Phototubes containing a photocathode which emits electrons when illuminated such that the tube conducts a current proportional to the light intensity Microchannel plate detectors use a porous glass substrate as a mechanism for multiplying electrons They can be used in combination with a photocathode like the photomultiplier described above with the porous glass substrate acting as a dynode stage Semiconductor edit Active pixel sensors APSs are image sensors Usually made in a complementary metal oxide semiconductor CMOS process and also known as CMOS image sensors APSs are commonly used in cell phone cameras web cameras and some DSLRs Cadmium zinc telluride radiation detectors can operate in direct conversion or photoconductive mode at room temperature unlike some other materials particularly germanium which require liquid nitrogen cooling Their relative advantages include high sensitivity for x rays and gamma rays due to the high atomic numbers of Cd and Te and better energy resolution than scintillator detectors Charge coupled devices CCD are image sensors which are used to record images in astronomy digital photography and digital cinematography Before the 1990s photographic plates were most common in astronomy The next generation of astronomical instruments such as the Astro E2 include cryogenic detectors needs update HgCdTe infrared detectors Detection occurs when an infrared photon of sufficient energy kicks an electron from the valence band to the conduction band Such an electron is collected by a suitable external readout integrated circuits ROIC and transformed into an electric signal LEDs which are reverse biased to act as photodiodes See LEDs as photodiode light sensors Photoresistors or Light Dependent Resistors LDR which change resistance according to light intensity Normally the resistance of LDRs decreases with increasing intensity of light falling on it 11 Photodiodes which can operate in photovoltaic mode or photoconductive mode 12 13 Photodiodes are often combined with low noise analog electronics to convert the photocurrent into a voltage that can be digitized 14 15 Phototransistors which act like amplifying photodiodes Pinned photodiodes a photodetector structure with low lag low noise high quantum efficiency and low dark current widely used in most CCD and CMOS image sensors 16 Quantum dot photoconductors or photodiodes which can handle wavelengths in the visible and infrared spectral regions Semiconductor detectors are employed in gamma and X ray spectrometry and as particle detectors citation needed Silicon drift detectors SDDs are X ray radiation detectors used in x ray spectrometry EDS and electron microscopy EDX 17 Photovoltaic edit Photovoltaic cells or solar cells which produce a voltage and supply an electric current when sunlight or certain kinds of light shines on them Thermal edit Bolometers measure the power of incident electromagnetic radiation via the heating of a material with a temperature dependent electrical resistance A microbolometer is a specific type of bolometer used as a detector in a thermal camera Cryogenic detectors are sufficiently sensitive to measure the energy of single x ray visible and infrared photons 18 Pyroelectric detectors detect photons through the heat they generate and the subsequent voltage generated in pyroelectric materials Thermopiles detect electromagnetic radiation through heat then generating a voltage in thermocouples Golay cells detect photons by the heat they generate in a gas filled chamber causing the gas to expand and deform a flexible membrane whose deflection is measured Photochemical edit Photoreceptor cells in the retina detect light through for instance a rhodopsin photon induced chemical cascade Chemical detectors such as photographic plates in which a silver halide molecule is split into an atom of metallic silver and a halogen atom The photographic developer causes adjacent molecules to split similarly Polarization edit The photorefractive effect is used in holographic data storage Polarization sensitive photodetectors use optically anisotropic materials to detect photons of a desired linear polarization 19 Graphene silicon photodetectors edit A graphene n type silicon heterojunction has been demonstrated to exhibit strong rectifying behavior and high photoresponsivity Graphene is coupled with silicon quantum dots Si QDs on top of bulk Si to form a hybrid photodetector Si QDs cause an increase of the built in potential of the graphene Si Schottky junction while reducing the optical reflection of the photodetector Both the electrical and optical contributions of Si QDs enable a superior performance of the photodetector 20 See also editLighting control system List of sensors Optoelectronics Photoelectric sensor Photosensitivity Readout integrated circuit Resonant cavity enhanced photo detector Photodetection Portals nbsp Electronics nbsp Energy nbsp Physics nbsp TechnologyReferences edit Haugan H J Elhamri S Szmulowicz F Ullrich B Brown G J Mitchel W C 2008 Study of residual background carriers in midinfrared InAs GaSb superlattices for uncooled detector operation Applied Physics Letters 92 7 071102 Bibcode 2008ApPhL 92g1102H doi 10 1063 1 2884264 S2CID 39187771 a b Donati S Photodetectors PDF unipv it Prentice Hall Retrieved 1 June 2016 a b Yotter R A Wilson D M June 2003 A review of photodetectors for sensing light emitting reporters in biological systems IEEE Sensors Journal 3 3 288 303 Bibcode 2003ISenJ 3 288Y doi 10 1109 JSEN 2003 814651 Stockmann F May 1975 Photodetectors their performance and their limitations Applied Physics 7 1 1 5 Bibcode 1975ApPhy 7 1S doi 10 1007 BF00900511 S2CID 121425624 a b Singh Yogesh Kumar Manoj Yadav Reena Kumar Ashish Rani Sanju Shashi Singh Preetam Husale Sudhir Singh V N 2022 08 15 Enhanced photoconductivity performance of microrod based Sb2Se3 device Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells 243 111765 doi 10 1016 j solmat 2022 111765 ISSN 0927 0248 A Grinberg Anatoly Luryi Serge 1 July 1988 Theory of the photon drag effect in a two dimensional electron gas Physical Review B 38 1 87 96 Bibcode 1988PhRvB 38 87G doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 38 87 PMID 9945167 Bishop P Gibson A Kimmitt M October 1973 The performance of photon drag detectors at high laser intensities IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics 9 10 1007 1011 Bibcode 1973IJQE 9 1007B doi 10 1109 JQE 1973 1077407 Singh Yogesh Parmar Rahul Srivastava Avritti Yadav Reena Kumar Kapil Rani Sanju Shashi Srivastava Sanjay K Husale Sudhir Sharma Mahesh Kushvaha Sunil Singh Singh Vidya Nand 2023 06 16 Highly Responsive Near Infrared Si Sb 2 Se 3 Photodetector via Surface Engineering of Silicon ACS Applied Materials amp Interfaces 15 25 30443 30454 doi 10 1021 acsami 3c04043 ISSN 1944 8244 Stillman G E Wolfe C M 1977 01 01 Willardson R K Beer Albert C eds Chapter 5 Avalanche Photodiodes This work was sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and by the Department of the Air Force Semiconductors and Semimetals vol 12 Elsevier pp 291 393 retrieved 2023 05 11 Hu Yue 1 October 2014 Modeling sources of nonlinearity in a simple pin photodetector Journal of Lightwave Technology 32 20 3710 3720 Bibcode 2014JLwT 32 3710H CiteSeerX 10 1 1 670 2359 doi 10 1109 JLT 2014 2315740 S2CID 9882873 Photo Detector Circuit oscience info Pearsall Thomas 2010 Photonics Essentials 2nd edition McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 162935 5 Archived from the original on 2021 08 17 Retrieved 2021 02 24 Paschotta Dr Rudiger Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology photodetectors photodiodes phototransistors pyroelectric photodetectors array powermeter noise www rp photonics com Retrieved 2016 05 31 PDA10A EC Si Amplified Fixed Gain Detector User Manual PDF Thorlabs Retrieved 24 April 2018 DPD80 760nm Datasheet Resolved Instruments Retrieved 24 April 2018 Fossum E R Hondongwa D B 2014 A Review of the Pinned Photodiode for CCD and CMOS Image Sensors IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society 2 3 33 43 doi 10 1109 JEDS 2014 2306412 Silicon Drift Detectors PDF tools thermofisher com Thermo Scientific Enss Christian ed 2005 Cryogenic Particle Detection Springer Topics in applied physics 99 ISBN 978 3 540 20113 7 Yuan Hongtao Liu Xiaoge Afshinmanesh Farzaneh Li Wei Xu Gang Sun Jie Lian Biao Curto Alberto G Ye Guojun Hikita Yasuyuki Shen Zhixun Zhang Shou Cheng Chen Xianhui Brongersma Mark Hwang Harold Y Cui Yi 1 June 2015 Polarization sensitive broadband photodetector using a black phosphorus vertical p n junction Nature Nanotechnology 10 8 707 713 arXiv 1409 4729 Bibcode 2015NatNa 10 707Y doi 10 1038 nnano 2015 112 PMID 26030655 Yu Ting Wang Feng Xu Yang Ma Lingling Pi Xiaodong Yang Deren 2016 Graphene Coupled with Silicon Quantum Dots for High Performance Bulk Silicon Based Schottky Junction Photodetectors Advanced Materials 28 24 4912 4919 doi 10 1002 adma 201506140 PMID 27061073 S2CID 205267070 External links edit nbsp Media related to Optical sensors at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https 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