Claims
- 1. A photodetector comprising:
an absorption region made from a first semiconductor material, said absorption region configured to photogenerate charge carriers in response to incident light; a multiplication region made from a second semiconductor material configured to receive at least a fraction of said photogenerated charge carriers, and comprising a p-n junction to substantially multiply the number of charge carriers by avalanche multiplication; contacts for applying a reverse bias voltage across said photodetector, wherein said semiconductor materials have differing lattice constants, and said p-n junction is at a distance of more than about two tenths of a micron from said absorption region.
- 2. A photodetector comprising:
an absorption region made from a first semiconductor material, said absorption region configured to photogenerate charge carriers in response to incident light; a multiplication region made from a second semiconductor material configured to receive at least a fraction of said photogenerated charge carriers, and comprising a p-n junction to substantially multiply the number of charge carriers by avalanche multiplication, said p-n junction having an unbiased depletion width; contacts for applying a reverse bias voltage across said photodetector, wherein said regions are in physical proximity, and wherein control over electric fields in said regions is obtained by placing said p-n junction diode at a distance greater than about said unbiased depletion width away from said absorption region.
- 3. The photodetector of claim 2 wherein said electrical fields are chosen for high gain-bandwidth device performance.
- 4. The photodetector of claim 2 wherein said first semiconductor material is a compound semiconductor layer disposed on a substrate wafer, and wherein said second semiconductor material is a Group IV semiconductor layer disposed on top of said compound semiconductor layer.
- 5. The photodetector of claim 4 wherein said first semiconductor material is an InGaAs layer epitaxially grown on an InP substrate and said second semiconductor material is a thin silicon layer.
- 6. A monolithic circuit comprising:
the photodetector of claim 4; and components at least partially formed in said compound semiconductor layer adjoining said photodetector.
- 7. The photodetector of claim 4 wherein an active device area is defined by forming a mesa through said through said Group IV semiconductor layer and said compound semiconductor layer.
- 8. The photodetector of claim 2 wherein said second semiconductor material is a Group IV semiconductor layer disposed on a substrate wafer, and said first semiconductor material is a compound semiconductor layer disposed on said Group IV semiconductor layer.
- 9. The photodetector of claim 8 wherein an active device area is defined by forming a mesa through said through said Group IV semiconductor layer and said compound semiconductor layer.
- 10. A photodetector comprising:
an absorption region made from a first semiconductor material, said absorption region configured to photogenerate charge carriers in response to incident light; a multiplication region made from a second semiconductor material configured to receive at least a fraction of said photogenerated charge carriers, said multiplication region comprising a p-n junction to substantially multiply the number of charge carriers by avalanche multiplication; contacts for applying a reverse bias voltage across said photodetector, wherein said semiconductor materials have differing lattice constants, wherein an electric field maximum for said applied reverse bias voltage is located in said multiplication region a substantial distance away from said absorption region, and wherein as said reverse bias voltage increases electric fields in said photodetector increase and move toward said absorption region.
- 11. The photodetector of claim 10 wherein said electric fields increase in said absorption region gradually and controllably.
- 12. The photodetector of claim 10 wherein said electric fields in said absorption region depend primarily on the thickness and doping concentration of said multiplication region.
- 13. The photodetector of claim 10 wherein said second semiconductor material is an epitaxially-grown layer.
- 14. The photodetector of claim 10 wherein said second semiconductor material is a thinned semiconductor layer.
- 15. The photodetector of claim 11 wherein by dopant concentration and said thickness are selected so that at an operating reverse bias voltage said electric field in said absorption region has a value corresponding to about the maximum carrier velocities in said first semiconductor material, said value below electric field values which cause carrier tunneling in said first semiconductor material.
- 16. A photodetector comprising:
an n+ type silicon substrate; a p− type epitaxial silicon layer grown on said n+ type silicon substrate; a n-type InGaAs absorption layer bonded to said p− type epitaxial silicon layer; a first contact formed on said n+ type silicon substrate; and a second contact formed on said n-type InGaAs absorption layer, wherein in operation of said photodetector a reverse bias voltage is applied across said contacts causing an electric field maximum at about the interface between said n+ type silicon substrate and said p− type epitaxial silicon layer.
- 17. The photodetector of claim 16 wherein said n+ type silicon substrate comprises a substrate having a resistivity between about 10 to 30 Mohm-cm, wherein said n-type InGaAs absorption layer is about 1000 nm thick and has an unintentional doping level less than about 1×1015 atoms/cm−3), and wherein said p− type epitaxial silicon layer is about 1 um thick and has a doping level of about 3×1016 atoms/cm.−3.
- 18. The photodetector of claim 16 wherein said first contact comprises an n+ implant layer.
- 19. The photodetector of claim 16 wherein said second contact comprises epitaxial structures formed on said n-type InGaAs absorption layer.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 09/730,692 filed Dec. 6, 2000, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09730692 |
Dec 2000 |
US |
Child |
09971316 |
Oct 2001 |
US |