Silicon single-photon avalanche diodes with nano-structured light trapping

Kai Zang(Stanford Medicine), Xiao Jiang(University of Science and Technology of China), Yijie Huo(Stanford University), Xun Ding(University of Science and Technology of China), Matthew Morea(Stanford University), Xiaochi Chen(Stanford University), Ching-Ying Lu(Stanford University), Jian Ma(University of Science and Technology of China), Ming Zhou(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Zhenyang Xia(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Zongfu Yu(University of Wisconsin–Madison), T. I. Kamins(Stanford University), Qiang Zhang(University of Science and Technology of China), James S. Harris(Stanford University)
Nature Communications
September 14, 2017
Cited by 108Open Access
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Abstract

Silicon single-photon avalanche detectors are becoming increasingly significant in research and in practical applications due to their high signal-to-noise ratio, complementary metal oxide semiconductor compatibility, room temperature operation, and cost-effectiveness. However, there is a trade-off in current silicon single-photon avalanche detectors, especially in the near infrared regime. Thick-junction devices have decent photon detection efficiency but poor timing jitter, while thin-junction devices have good timing jitter but poor efficiency. Here, we demonstrate a light-trapping, thin-junction Si single-photon avalanche diode that breaks this trade-off, by diffracting the incident photons into the horizontal waveguide mode, thus significantly increasing the absorption length. The photon detection efficiency has a 2.5-fold improvement in the near infrared regime, while the timing jitter remains 25 ps. The result provides a practical and complementary metal oxide semiconductor compatible method to improve the performance of single-photon avalanche detectors, image sensor arrays, and silicon photomultipliers over a broad spectral range.The performance of silicon single-photon avalanche detectors is currently limited by the trade-off between photon detection efficiency and timing jitter. Here, the authors demonstrate how a CMOS-compatible, nanostructured, thin junction structure can make use of tailored light trapping to break this trade-off.


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