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1.
Opt Express ; 27(4): 5835-5842, 2019 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30876178

ABSTRACT

An avalanche photodiode with a ratio of hole-to-electron ionization coefficients, k = 0, is known to produce negligible excess noise irrespective of the avalanche gain. The low noise amplification process can be utilized to detect very low light levels. In this work, we demonstrated InAs avalanche photodiodes with high external quantum efficiency of 60% (achieved without antireflection coating) at the peak wavelength of 3.48 µm. At 77 K, our InAs avalanche photodiodes show low dark current (limited by 300 K blackbody background radiation), high avalanche gain and negligible excess noise, as InAs exhibits k = 0. They were therefore able to detect very low levels of light, at 15-31 photons per 50 µs laser pulse at 1550 nm wavelength. These correspond to the lowest detected average power by InAs avalanche photodiodes, ranging from 19 to 40 fW. The measurement system's noise floor was dominated by the pre-amplifier. Our results suggest that, with a lower system noise, InAs avalanche photodiodes have high potential for optical detection of single or few-photon signal levels at wavelengths of 1550 nm or longer.

2.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 9107, 2018 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29904062

ABSTRACT

The electron and hole avalanche multiplication characteristics have been measured in bulk AlAs0.56Sb0.44 p-i-n and n-i-p homojunction diodes, lattice matched to InP, with nominal avalanche region thicknesses of ~0.6 µm, 1.0 µm and 1.5 µm. From these and data from two much thinner devices, the bulk electron and hole impact ionization coefficients (α and ß respectively), have been determined over an electric-field range from 220-1250 kV/cm for α and from 360-1250 kV/cm for ß for the first time. The α/ß ratio is found to vary from 1000 to 2 over this field range, making it the first report of a wide band-gap III-V semiconductor with ionization coefficient ratios similar to or larger than that observed in silicon.

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