Sensors (Dec 2017)

Thin-Film Quantum Dot Photodiode for Monolithic Infrared Image Sensors

  • Pawel E. Malinowski,
  • Epimitheas Georgitzikis,
  • Jorick Maes,
  • Ioanna Vamvaka,
  • Fortunato Frazzica,
  • Jan Van Olmen,
  • Piet De Moor,
  • Paul Heremans,
  • Zeger Hens,
  • David Cheyns

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s17122867
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. 2867

Abstract

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Imaging in the infrared wavelength range has been fundamental in scientific, military and surveillance applications. Currently, it is a crucial enabler of new industries such as autonomous mobility (for obstacle detection), augmented reality (for eye tracking) and biometrics. Ubiquitous deployment of infrared cameras (on a scale similar to visible cameras) is however prevented by high manufacturing cost and low resolution related to the need of using image sensors based on flip-chip hybridization. One way to enable monolithic integration is by replacing expensive, small-scale III–V-based detector chips with narrow bandgap thin-films compatible with 8- and 12-inch full-wafer processing. This work describes a CMOS-compatible pixel stack based on lead sulfide quantum dots (PbS QD) with tunable absorption peak. Photodiode with a 150-nm thick absorber in an inverted architecture shows dark current of 10−6 A/cm2 at −2 V reverse bias and EQE above 20% at 1440 nm wavelength. Optical modeling for top illumination architecture can improve the contact transparency to 70%. Additional cooling (193 K) can improve the sensitivity to 60 dB. This stack can be integrated on a CMOS ROIC, enabling order-of-magnitude cost reduction for infrared sensors.

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