Title :
Physical model of depletion and accumulation in quantum-well infrared photodetectors
Author :
Pan, Janet L. ; Fonstad, Clifton G., Jr.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Yale Univ., New Haven, CT, USA
fDate :
11/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Numerical work has shown that, at low operating temperatures or large incident photon fluxes, carriers deplete from the quantum wells near the emitter contact in a quantum-well infrared photodetector (QWIP). A physical model is developed in this work to describe, with closed-form analytical expressions, the accumulation and depletion of carriers in QWIPs. In QWIPs having the same growth sequence (layer widths and compositions) in each period, carrier depletion is found to occur only in one or two QWs near the emitter contact at the small applied biases for which the electron drift velocity is linear in the electric field. At intermediate applied biases for which the electron drift velocity is saturated, carrier depiction is found to be partial, uniform (throughout the depletion region), and abrupt, with the total charge in the depletion region fixed and with the depletion width increasing linearly with applied bias. At a large applied bias, carriers are found to be uniformly accumulated in the device. Carrier depletion or accumulation in QWIPs arises from the different dependences on the local electric field of the different physical mechanisms which are responsible for the carrier injection from the contacts (via thermionic emission or thermionic field assisted tunneling) and for the photoconduction process (via drift)
Keywords :
carrier density; electron mobility; infrared detectors; photoconductivity; semiconductor device models; semiconductor quantum wells; thermionic emission; carrier depletion; carrier injection; closed-form analytical expressions; electric field; electron drift velocity saturation; emitter contact; growth sequence; large applied bias; large incident photon fluxes; layer widths; local electric field; low operating temperatures; photoconduction process; physical depletion model; physical mechanisms; quantum-well infrared photodetector accumulation; small applied biases; thermionic field assisted tunneling; Electron mobility; Infrared detectors; Nonuniform electric fields; Numerical models; Photoconducting devices; Photoconductivity; Photodetectors; Quantum wells; Thermionic emission; Tunneling;
Journal_Title :
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of