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Evolution and Prospect of Single-Photon Avalanche Diodes and Quenching Circuits

Evolution and Prospect of Single-Photon Avalanche Diodes and Quenching Circuits. Politecnico di Milano, Dip. Elettronica e Informazione, Milano, Italy. S. Cova, M. Ghioni, A. Lotito, F. Zappa. Outline. Introduction From Device Physics to Detector Performance Technology and Device Design

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Evolution and Prospect of Single-Photon Avalanche Diodes and Quenching Circuits

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  1. Evolution and Prospect of Single-Photon Avalanche Diodes and Quenching Circuits Politecnico di Milano, Dip. Elettronica e Informazione, Milano, Italy S. Cova, M. Ghioni, A. Lotito, F. Zappa

  2. Outline • Introduction • From Device Physics to Detector Performance • Technology and Device Design • Quenching Circuit : Role and Evolution • Conclusions

  3. The Origin @ Shockley Laboratory in early 60’s : Avalanche Physics Investigation • Basic insight • Model of behavior above Breakdown • Single-Photon pulses observed, but … • application limited by device and circuit features R.Haitz et al, J.Appl.Phys. (1963-1965)

  4. APD SPAD Single-Photon Avalanche Diode Avalanche PhotoDiode • Bias: well ABOVE breakdown • Geiger-mode: it’s a TRIGGER device!! • Gain: meaningless ... or “infinite”!! • Bias: slightly BELOWbreakdown • Linear-mode: it’s an AMPLIFIER • Gain: limited < 1000

  5. for SPAD operation anyway mandatory to avoid local Breakdown, i.e. • edge breakdown  guard-ring feature • microplasmas  uniform area, no precipitates etc. but for good SPAD performance..... furtherrequirements!!

  6. Earlier Diode Structures McIntyre’s reach-through diode Haitz’s planar diode “Thick” SPAD “Thin” SPAD

  7. Quantum Detection Efficiency (QE) Carrier Photogeneration AND Avalanche Triggering!!  high excess bias voltage W.Oldham, P.Samuelson, P.Antognetti, IEEE Trans. ED (1972)

  8. Dark-Counting Rate (primary noise) • Free Carrier Generation • Field-Assisted Generation • Generation - Recombination Centers

  9. Carrier Trapping and Delayed Release  Afterpulsing

  10. Trapping and Afterpulsing • in operation @ low temperature • slower trap release primary dark-counting rate is reduced • but afterpulsing is enhanced ! S.Cova, A.Lacaita, G.Ripamonti, IEEE EDL (1991)

  11. Photon Timing

  12. Photon Timing: Diffusion Tail • carrier diffusion in neutral layer •  delay to avalanche triggering G.Ripamonti, S.Cova, Sol. State Electronics (1985)

  13. Photon Timing: main peak width • Statistical Fluctuations in the Avalanche • Vertical Build-up (minor contribution) • Lateral Propagation (major contribution) - via Multiplication-assisted diffusion • A. Lacaita, M.Mastrapasqua et al, APL and El.Lett. (1990) • - via Photon-assisted propagation • P.P.Webb, R.J.McIntyre RCA Eng.(1982); • A.Lacaita et al, APL (1992)

  14. Avalanche Lateral Propagation • Multiplication-assisted • Photon-assisted higher excess bias voltage  improved time-resolution A. Spinelli, A. Lacaita, IEEE TED (1997)

  15. Arrays and optical crosstalk Hot-Carrier Luminescence 105 avalanche carriers 1 emitted photon A. Lacaita et al, IEEE TED (1993) • Counteract: • Optical isolation between pixels • Avalanche charge minimization F.Zappa et al, ESSDERC (1997)

  16. Low Detector Noise • For low dark-counting rate • Reduce GR center concentration • Reduce Field-assisted generation • For low afterpulsing probability • Reduce deep level concentration (minority carrier traps) Technology issue: for wide sensitive area very efficient gettering is required!!

  17. Thick Si SPAD Thin Si SPAD Planar structure typical active region: 20 m diameter 1m thick Reach-Trough structure typical active region: 200 m diameter 30m thick

  18. Thick Si SPAD’s Thin Si SPAD’s • Very good QE and low noise • Sub-nanosecond timing • High voltage : 300 to 400V • High dissipation : Peltier cooler required • Ultra-pure high-resistivity Si substrate • Dedicated fabrication process • NOT COMPATIBLE with array detector and IC’s • Delicate and degradable • Very expensive • SINGLE COMMERCIAL SOURCE • Good QE and low noise • Picosecond timing • Low voltage : 15 to 40V • Low power : cooling not necessary • Standard Si substrate • Planar fabrication process • COMPATIBLE with array detector and IC’s (integrated circuits) • Robust and rugged • Low-cost • NO COMMERCIAL SOURCE TODAY

  19. Photon Timing: SLIKTM reach-trough structure H.Dautet et al, Appl.Opt. (1994)

  20. Photon Timing: planar epitaxial structure neutral p layer thickness w tail lifetime = w2 / 2Dn A.Lacaita, M.Ghioni, S.Cova, Electron. Lett. (1989)

  21. Photon Timing: diffusion-tail-free structure FWHM = 35ps Dual-Junctionepitaxial structure FW(1/100)M = 125ps FW(1/1000)M = 214ps A.Lacaita, S.Cova, M.Ghioni, F. Zappa, IEEE EDL (1993)

  22. Photon Timing: diffusion-tail-free structure Dual-Junctionepitaxial structure A.Spinelli, M.Ghioni, S.Cova and L.M.Davis, IEEE JQE (1998)

  23. IR spectral range : Ge devices • Similar to silicon devices, but • deep cooling mandatory • absorption edge below 1500nm @ low temperature • very strong trapping effects • strong field-assisted generation effects A.Lacaita, P.A.Francese, F.Zappa, S.Cova, Appl.Opt. (1994)

  24. IR spectral range : InGaAs-InP devices • very strong trapping • fast-gated operation only! A.Lacaita, F.Zappa, S.Cova, P.Lovati, Appl.Opt. (1996)

  25. Passive quenching is simple... Current Pulses Diode Voltage • … but suffers from • long, not well defined deadtime • low max counting rate < 100kc/s • photon timing spread • et al

  26. Activequenching…. • ...provides: • short, well-defined deadtime • high counting rate > 1 Mc/s • good photon timing • standard logic output Output Pulses P.Antognetti, S.Cova, A.Longoni IEEE Ispra Nucl.El.Symp. (1975) Euratom Publ. EUR 537e

  27. AQC evolution Earlier modules in the 80’s Compact modules in the 90’s Integrated AQC today

  28. iAQC - Integrated Active Quenching Circuit Input sensing and quenching stage • F.Zappa, S.Cova, M.Ghioni, US patent appl. March 5, 2001, (allowance notice Nov. 6, 2002, priority date March 9, 2000) • F. Zappa et al, ESSCIRC 2002

  29. +VHIGH +5V IN OUT WIDTH GATE GND iAQC - Integrated Active Quenching Circuit CMOS design

  30. iAQC - Integrated Active Quenching Circuit • Practical advantages • Miniaturization  mini-module detectors • Low-Power Consumption portable modules • Ruggedness and Reliability • Plus improved performance • Reduced Capacitance • Improved Photon Timing • Reduced Avalanche charge • Reduced Afterpulsing • Reduced Photoemission  reduced crosstalk in arrays

  31. timing pickup Can Photon-Timing be improved for existing AQCs? …in this way it does not work properly

  32. timing pickup Can Photon-Timing be improved for existing AQCs? ….in this way it does!! S.Cova, M.Ghioni, F.Zappa, US patent No. 6,384,663 B2, date May 7, 2002 (priority date Mar 9, 2000)

  33. Photon-Timing with PerkinElmer SLIKTM diode with discrete-component AQC alone… …and with additional timing circuit

  34. Conclusions and Outlook • Silicon SPAD technology is fairly advanced and can be further improved • Low-cost highly efficient Si-SPADs appear now to be feasible • Monolithic iAQCs make possible miniaturized (and even monolithic) detector modules • SPAD Array detectors are a realistic prospect • Ge, III-V and II-VI SPAD detector technologies require further progress, but may open remarkable new perspectives

  35. QE comparison

  36. Photon Timing comparison PerkinElmer SPCM (SLIKTM diode) Planar thin Si-SPAD

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