Abstract

The effects of 63 MeV proton and 60Co gamma irradiation on the operation of 4.3 μm cutoff nBn photodetectors are demonstrated separately, and both are shown to yield a total ionizing dose (TID) effect. The effect is shown here in an InAsSbBi nBn detector and has been observed in other bulk alloy nBn detectors, and is unusual as it is notably absent in superlattice nBn detectors. The non-antireflection coated detectors exhibit a pre-radiation quantum efficiency of 17% at 3.3 μm wavelength and a dark current density of 50 μA/cm2, or roughly 300× the Rule 07 expectation, at their ideal operating voltage of −0.4 V bias at 150 K. Step-wise proton irradiation and in situ measurement indicate that the dark current increases to about 400× Rule 07 at the highest proton dose level of 150 krad(Si) (9.10 × 1011 p+/cm2), while the quantum efficiency is degraded at a relatively faster rate than the majority of analogous detectors characterized by our lab. Both the photocurrent and dark current are also shown to exhibit a turn-on voltage magnitude reduction of 100 mV following either gamma or proton irradiation, a trend which is attributable to negative trapped charge at the barrier interface (TID effect). This theory is further supported by an observed capacitance density magnitude reduction with dose and affirmed with Silvaco TCAD simulations. Following both proton exposure and subsequent anneal and gamma exposure and subsequent anneal; dark current, photocurrent, and CV all approach their pre-radiation baseline values.

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