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EPSRC Reference: EP/E063632/1
Title: New high-performance avalanche photodiodes based on the unique properties of dilute nitrides
Principal Investigator: Allam, Professor J
Other Investigators:
Sweeney, Professor SJ Adams, Professor A
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Bookham Technology Plc
Department: Advanced Technology Institute
Organisation: University of Surrey
Scheme: Standard Research
Starts: 29 April 2008 Ends: 28 July 2010 Value (£): 231,698
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Materials Characterisation Materials Synthesis & Growth
Optoelect. Devices & Circuits
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Electronics
Related Grants:
EP/E065007/1
Panel History:  
Summary on Grant Application Form
To meet the demands of the internet to transmit large volumes of data over long distances, information is sent as short pulses of light. The photodetector which receives this information must have high sensitivity, a fast response, and low levels of 'noise' (random spurious signals). Photodetectors can even be made sensitive enough to detect single photons, and 'photon counting' is an important technique in many applications including sequencing the human genome and quantum computing. Most high-sensitivity photodetectors are semiconductor avalanche photodiodes (APDs): semiconductor materials are robust, cheap, compact, and efficient, while APDs make use of an effect where a very weak signal can trigger a very large current flow (like a single snowflake setting off a massive avalanche of snow).There are many different semiconducting materials, and each is sensitive to a different colour of light or wavelength. While silicon works really well as an APD, it doesn't detect infrared light at the wavelengths needed for optical communications and other applications. We can use combinations of material - one to absorb the light and one to do the avalanche multiplication - but it can be tricky getting the signal across from one material to the other. So APDs are hard to make and therefore expensive. We are going to make new types of APDs with the performance of silicon but sensitive to infrared light, which are also easier/cheaper to make than existing infrared detectors. Firstly, we are going to use a relatively new type of semiconductor (a 'dilute nitride') as the absorbing layer. Dilute nitrides are completely different from other materials: adding a small amount of nitrogen to a conventional semiconductor like gallium arsenide has a huge effect on the properties and can make it sensitive to infrared light. Dilute nitrides even seem to be less noisy than other absorbing layers, since their special properties suppress a source of noise which comes from quantum mechanical tunneling (electrons feel 'heavier' in dilute nitrides and find it harder to tunnel through barriers).Secondly, we are going to replace the conventional multiplication layer made of indium phosphide or gallium arsenide, which compared to multiplication layers made of silicon are rather noisy. The noise comes because multiplication is random: we know the probability that multiplication will occur within a certain time, but not exactly when it will occur. The particular electronic properties of dilute nitrides means that electrons in one energy band (the valance band) can easily trigger avalanches, while electrons in another band (the conduction band) should find it very hard. This situation should lead to very low multiplication noise, perhaps even as low as silicon, and has never been studied before.There is a lot of interesting physics in the movement of electrons in dilute nitride semiconductors, and in the statistics of avalanche multiplication in thin layers. We will use specialized techniques to study these, including squeezing the material under very high pressures to change its properties. This will give us the understanding we need to produce better high-sensitivity light detectors, which are useful for communications, medicine, pollution monitoring, and many other areas that affect our daily lives.
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Organisation Website: http://www.surrey.ac.uk