We report the productive outcome of the design, fabrication, and testing of a new class of GaN/AlGaN-based ultrafast, sensitive photodiodes for deep-UV solar blind photodetection. Pt was employed as the interdigitated metal electrode to establish that while a Schottky contact was formed at the metal/semiconductor heterojunction, it was the quantum wells in the p-i-n vertical structure that produced the diode characteristics of the detectors. The metal‒semiconductor‒metal design retained its ultrafast property as expected in the p-i-n structure because the spacing between the interdigitated fingers was asymmetrically implemented to optimize the photogenerated carriers’ transit time from the quantum well to the external circuitry. Also, the vertical p-i-n structure provided its renowned efficient photocarrier generation, which was significantly enhanced by the delta quantum well architecture of the vertical epitaxial structure. The active area of the device was 300 μm × 300 μm with 5-μm finger width, and asymmetric electrode spacing of 2 μm, 3 μm, and 5 μm. The best device had peak responsivity of 3.5 A/W under 262-nm illumination with full width half maximum of 337.2-ps and 37.5-ps rise times when biased with 20 V.
Aluminum gallium-nitride (AlxGa1–xN)-based metal−semiconductor−metal (MSM) ultraviolet photodetectors photodetectors (PD’s) have been successfully designed and fabricated using conventional photolithography techniques and tested experimentally to study their spectral sensitivity across different Al content, x, with x varying from 0 to 0.3. (Al)GaN-based UV PD’s have wide and tunable direct band gaps. The ability to easily select the photodetected wavelength by simply varying the aluminum content of GaN thin film (AlxGa1–xN) is a significant advantage of these group III–V compounds. Typically, MSM PD’s grown on (Al)GaN thin films result in ultrafast photodetection because of their highly mobile carriers. These devices are limited by the carrier transit time due to the negligible capacitance presented by the interdigitated fingers. Various electrode geometries were fabricated to investigate the influence of metal contact shapes on the devices’ performance indices with emphasis on the response speed and bias-voltage–independent efficiency. Coupled with the independently measured Hall mobility and electric field, we computed the carrier transit time of the devices to be as short as 1.31 ps and the bias-voltage−independent external quantum efficiencies were as high as 70% at 60 V for n-doped and intrinsic devices when operated in the reverse bias regime. Here, (Alx)Ga1–xN photodetectors were designed to explore spectral sensitivity by altering x from 0 to 0.3.
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