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Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes

Photodiodes are important components in optical data links, and their performance degradation under irradiation has to be understood in order to guarantee the long-term functionality of the data links in radiation environments of high-energy physics experiments. Indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) on i...

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Autores principales: Olantera, Lauri, Bottom, Freya, Kraxner, Andrea, Detraz, Stephane, Menouni, Mohsine, Moreira, Paulo, Scarcella, Carmelo, Sigaud, Christophe, Soos, Csaba, Troska, Jan, Vasey, Francois
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNS.2019.2902624
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2757334
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author Olantera, Lauri
Bottom, Freya
Kraxner, Andrea
Detraz, Stephane
Menouni, Mohsine
Moreira, Paulo
Scarcella, Carmelo
Sigaud, Christophe
Soos, Csaba
Troska, Jan
Vasey, Francois
author_facet Olantera, Lauri
Bottom, Freya
Kraxner, Andrea
Detraz, Stephane
Menouni, Mohsine
Moreira, Paulo
Scarcella, Carmelo
Sigaud, Christophe
Soos, Csaba
Troska, Jan
Vasey, Francois
author_sort Olantera, Lauri
collection CERN
description Photodiodes are important components in optical data links, and their performance degradation under irradiation has to be understood in order to guarantee the long-term functionality of the data links in radiation environments of high-energy physics experiments. Indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) on indium phosphide (InP) photodiodes are attractive candidates for these applications, thanks to their relatively modest radiation-induced responsivity loss when operated at 850 nm. In this paper, we present the results that confirm earlier observed additional sensitivity penalties in InGaAs-based receivers. This behavior is further investigated by carrying out several proton tests where InGaAs photodiodes are irradiated together with alternative photodiode types. The critical parameters—responsivity, dark current, and capacitance—are measured up to fluences exceeding ${1\times 10^{16}}$ p/cm2. Radiation-induced dark current is shown to be orders of magnitude higher in InGaAs photodiodes than in GaAs and InGaAs on GaAs photodiodes. However, instead of the dark current increase, the additional losses with InGaAs photodiodes are shown to arise from strongly increased capacitance, which is a dominant feature only in InGaAs photodiodes. This is confirmed with simulations where the measured capacitance characteristics are used in the device model. Our results show that without precautions in the receiver design, radiation-induced capacitance can limit the use of InGaAs photodiodes in harsh radiation environments.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1750223
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2019
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spelling oai-inspirehep.net-17502232021-03-19T22:31:31Zdoi:10.1109/TNS.2019.2902624http://cds.cern.ch/record/2757334engOlantera, LauriBottom, FreyaKraxner, AndreaDetraz, StephaneMenouni, MohsineMoreira, PauloScarcella, CarmeloSigaud, ChristopheSoos, CsabaTroska, JanVasey, FrancoisRadiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs PhotodiodesDetectors and Experimental TechniquesPhotodiodes are important components in optical data links, and their performance degradation under irradiation has to be understood in order to guarantee the long-term functionality of the data links in radiation environments of high-energy physics experiments. Indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) on indium phosphide (InP) photodiodes are attractive candidates for these applications, thanks to their relatively modest radiation-induced responsivity loss when operated at 850 nm. In this paper, we present the results that confirm earlier observed additional sensitivity penalties in InGaAs-based receivers. This behavior is further investigated by carrying out several proton tests where InGaAs photodiodes are irradiated together with alternative photodiode types. The critical parameters—responsivity, dark current, and capacitance—are measured up to fluences exceeding ${1\times 10^{16}}$ p/cm2. Radiation-induced dark current is shown to be orders of magnitude higher in InGaAs photodiodes than in GaAs and InGaAs on GaAs photodiodes. However, instead of the dark current increase, the additional losses with InGaAs photodiodes are shown to arise from strongly increased capacitance, which is a dominant feature only in InGaAs photodiodes. This is confirmed with simulations where the measured capacitance characteristics are used in the device model. Our results show that without precautions in the receiver design, radiation-induced capacitance can limit the use of InGaAs photodiodes in harsh radiation environments.oai:inspirehep.net:17502232019
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Olantera, Lauri
Bottom, Freya
Kraxner, Andrea
Detraz, Stephane
Menouni, Mohsine
Moreira, Paulo
Scarcella, Carmelo
Sigaud, Christophe
Soos, Csaba
Troska, Jan
Vasey, Francois
Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes
title Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes
title_full Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes
title_fullStr Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes
title_full_unstemmed Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes
title_short Radiation Effects on High-Speed InGaAs Photodiodes
title_sort radiation effects on high-speed ingaas photodiodes
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNS.2019.2902624
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2757334
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