Abstract

The ultraviolet (UV) photoresponses of Wurtzite GaN, ZnO, and 6H-SiC-based Optical Field Effect Transistor (OPFET) detectors are estimated with an in-depth analysis of the same considering the generalized model and the front-illuminated model for high resolution imaging and UV communication applications. The gate materials considered for the proposed study are gold (Au) and Indium-Tin-Oxide (ITO) for GaN, Au for SiC, and Au and silver dioxide (AgO2) for ZnO. The results indicate significant improvement in the Linear Dynamic Range (LDR) over the previously investigated GaN OPFET (buried-gate, front-illuminated and generalized) models with Au gate. The generalized model has superior dynamic range than the front-illuminated model. In terms of responsivity, all the models including buried-gate OPFET exhibit high and comparable photoresponses. Buried-gate devices on the whole, exhibit faster response than the surface gate models except in the AgO2-ZnO generalized OPFET model wherein the switching time is the lowest. The generalized model enables faster switching than the front-illuminated model. The switching times in all the cases are of the order of nanoseconds to picoseconds. The SiC generalized OPFET model shows the highest 3-dB bandwidths of 11.88 GHz, 36.2 GHz, and 364 GHz, and modest unity-gain cut-off frequencies of 4.62 GHz, 8.71 GHz, and 5.71 GHz at the optical power densities of 0.575 μW/cm2, 0.575 mW/cm2, and 0.575 W/cm2 respectively. These are in overall, the highest detection-cum-amplifi-cation bandwidths among all the investigated devices. The same device exhibits the highest LDR of 73.3 dB. The device performance is superior to most of the other existing detectors along with comparable LDR, thus, emerging as a high performance photodetector for imaging and communication applications. All the detectors show considerably high detectivities owing to the high responsivity values. The results have been analyzed by the photovoltaic and the photoconductive effects, and the series resistance effects and will aid in conducting further research. The results are in line with the experiments and the commercially available software simulations. The devices will greatly contribute towards single photon counting, high resolution imaging, and UV communication applications.

Highlights

  • This paper is an extension of work originally presented in 10th International Conference and Workshop (MULTICON-W 2019), International Conference on Trends in Electronics and Communications (TELCON) [1].Ultraviolet (UV) photodetectors are useful in applications such as chemical, environmental, and biological analysis and monitoring, flame and radiation detection, astronomical studies, missile detection, and optical communication

  • This paper provides an in-depth analysis of SiC, GaN, and ZnO-based Optical Field Effect Transistor (OPFET) UV illumination models for high dynamic range imaging and communication applications

  • The photoconductive and the photovoltaic effects and the series resistance effects play an important role in explaining the observed dependence of the device characteristics on the material, structural, illumination model, and the external factors applied such as bias, wavelength, and optical power

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Summary

Introduction

This paper is an extension of work originally presented in 10th International Conference and Workshop (MULTICON-W 2019), International Conference on Trends in Electronics and Communications (TELCON) [1]. Material, illumination model, and optical power-based optimization are adopted for enhancing the performance of the device towards high resolution UV imaging and UV communication applications. This paper provides an in-depth analysis of SiC, GaN, and ZnO-based OPFET UV illumination models for high dynamic range imaging and communication applications. The previous works on GaN-based buried-gate OPFET, generalized model of OPFET and front-illuminated OPFET UV detectors with Au gate showed excellent photoresponse, fast response times, high detectivity along with enhanced bandwidth [1] [12]. The rest of the paper is organized as follows: At first, a brief theory is presented followed by the results and discussion, and the conclusion of the work done

Theory
Results and Discussion
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