Abstract

This paper reports performance data for back-illuminated planar n-on-p HgCdTe electron-initiated avalanche photodiode (e-APD) 4×4 arrays with large-area unit cells (250×250 &#956;m<sup>2</sup>). The arrays were fabricated from p-type HgCdTe films grown by LPE on CdZnTe substrates. The arrays were bump-mounted to fanout boards and were characterized in the back-illuminated mode. Gain increases exponentially with reverse bias voltage, and gain versus bias curves are quite uniform from element to element. The maximum gain measured is 648 at -11.7 V for a cutoff wavelength of 4.06 &#956;m at 160 K. For the same reverse bias voltage, the gain at 160 K for elements with two different cutoff wavelengths (3.54 and 4.06 &#956;m at 160 K) increases exponentially with increasing cutoff wavelength, in agreement with Beck's empirical model for gain versus voltage in HgCdTe e-APDs. Spot scan data show that both the V=0 response and the gain at V=-5.0 V are quite uniform spatially over the large junction area. To the best of our knowledge, these are the first spot scan data for avalanche gain ever reported for HgCdTe e-APDs. Capacitance versus voltage data are consistent with an ideal abrupt junction having a donor concentration equal to the indium counterdoping concentration in the as-grown LPE film. Calculations predict that bandwidths of 500 MHz should be readily achievable in this vertical collection geometry, and that bandwidths as high as 3 GHz may be possible with careful placement of the junction relative to the compositionally interdiffused region between the HgCdTe LPE film and the CdZnTe substrate.

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