RESUMO
Developing uncooled photodetectors at midwavelength infrared (MWIR) is critical for various applications including remote sensing, heat seeking, spectroscopy, and more. In this study, we demonstrate room-temperature operation of nanowire-based photodetectors at MWIR composed of vertical selective-area InAsSb nanowire photoabsorber arrays on large bandgap InP substrate with nanoscale plasmonic gratings. We accomplish this by significantly suppressing the nonradiative recombination at the InAsSb nanowire surfaces by introducing ex situ conformal Al2O3 passivation shells. Transient simulations estimate an extremely low surface recombination velocity on the order of 103 cm/s. We further achieve room-temperature photoluminescence emission from InAsSb nanowires, spanning the entire MWIR regime from 3 to 5 µm. A dry-etching process is developed to expose only the top nanowire facets for metal contacts, with the sidewalls conformally covered by Al2O3 shells, allowing for a higher internal quantum efficiency. Based on these techniques, we fabricate nanowire photodetectors with an optimized pitch and diameter and demonstrate room-temperature spectral response with MWIR detection signatures up to 3.4 µm. The results of this work indicate that uncooled focal plane arrays at MWIR on low-cost InP substrates can be designed with nanostructured absorbers for highly compact and fully integrated detection platforms.
RESUMO
The optical properties of In0.3Ga0.7As/GaAs surface quantum dots (SQDs) and buried QDs (BQDs) are investigated by photoluminescence (PL) measurements. The integrated PL intensity, linewidth, and lifetime of SQDs are significantly different from the BQDs both at room temperature and at low temperature. The differences in PL response, measured at both steady state and in transient, are attributed to carrier transfer between the surface states and the SQDs.