Embodiments of the present invention pertain to the field of photoconductors and more specifically related to semiconductor based detectors.
Photodetectors typically have a photoconductive semiconductor material, for examples, silicon (Si) and gallium arsenide (GaAs). Considerations in choosing a semiconductor material for a particular application include its energy gap, which in turn determines the range of wavelengths that can be detected, the time response, and the optical sensitivity of the material. The performance of a photodetector may be judged by various criteria including sensitivity. Sensitivity refers to the current produced by a photodetector with respect to the electromagnetic power. A photodetector with high sensitivity will produce more current for a given intensity of incident radiation than one with a low sensitivity. Sensitivity is affected by several factors including the mobility of the electrons in the material. Semiconductor materials with a higher mobility have a higher sensitivity because the charge carriers can move at a greater speed.
One type of conventional photodetector, illustrated in
After removal of the incident radiation, the charge carriers (electrons and holes) remain for a finite period of time until they either reach the electrodes or recombine. The term “charge carriers” is often used to refer to either the electrons, or holes, or both. The rate at which electrons and holes recombine is called the recombination rate, and is a property of the semiconductor material. The recombination rate limits the response time of the photoconductor. The un-recombined carriers can cause a lingering current due to the excess carriers that remain for a time, even after radiation is removed.
The tradeoff between response time and sensitivity is found in the properties of the semiconductor material itself. The unbound electrons in any semiconductor material have a mean lifetime before they are recombined with a hole. The value of the mean lifetime depends upon the characteristics of the semiconductor material. The faster the rate of recombination, the shorter the response time. Furthermore, the unbound electrons have a mobility figure dependent upon the semiconductor material. Higher mobility materials generally have a greater sensitivity. The resulting tradeoff between response time and sensitivity appears to be a direct result of competing properties (recombination rate vs. electron mobility) of the semiconductor material.
Another type of conventional photodetector is the photodiode, as illustrated in
In operation of a p-i-n photodiode, a reverse-bias voltage is applied across the photodiode 100 and x-rays are mostly absorbed in the intrinsic region. The electron-hole pairs then separate under the applied electric field and quickly migrate toward their respective poles. The electrons move toward the positive pole and the holes move toward the negative pole. Due to the low recombination rate of the intrinsic region and also due to the high mobility of the intrinsic material, there is little chance that the carriers will recombine before they arrive at the interface with the doped material. The electrons and holes then collect near the respective interface with the doped material. As a result of charge collection, the response of the p-i-n photodiode is capacitivly limited.
One problem with the conventional photodetectors is that they often suffer from poor sensitivity. Photodiode 100 of
An x-ray detection apparatus and method are described. In one embodiment, the method includes providing a photodetector having a semiconductor conversion layer disposed between a first contact and a second contact. The second contact being disposed over a surface of the semiconductor conversion layer opposite that of the first contact. The method also includes receiving x-rays incident through the second contact with respect to the first contact. The method also includes biasing the first contact to collect a lowest mobility carrier in the semiconductor conversion layer.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the accompanying drawings, and from the detailed description, which follows below.
The present invention is illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the accompanying figures.
In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth such as examples of specific components, processes, etc. in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art that these specific details need not be employed to practice the present invention. In other instances, well known components or methods have not been described in detail in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the present invention.
The terms “top,” “bottom,” “front,” “back,” “above,” “below,” “over,” and “between” as used herein refer to a relative position of one layer or component with respect to another. As such, one layer deposited or disposed above or below another layer, or between layers, may be directly in contact with the other layer(s) or may have one or more intervening layers. The term “coupled” as used herein means connected directly to or connected indirectly through one or more intervening layers or operatively coupled through non-physical connection (e.g., optically).
A photodetector biasing scheme is described that enables the detection of incident x-rays from either side of a photodetector. The photodectector may be configured to receive incident light (e.g., x-rays) on a particular surface of the detector based on the semiconductor material used for the conversion layer and the particular bias of the conversion layer. Depending on whether the mobility of electrons or holes in the semiconductor material is higher, the semiconductor material may be biased so that the lower mobility carriers are collected at the electrode where the x-ray incidence occurs. Because the x-rays are absorbed exponentially in the semiconductor material, most of the lower mobility carriers are required to travel a shorter distance (the high mobility carriers are collected at the opposite electrode) with such a biasing scheme, thereby improving charge collection.
In one embodiment, the photodetector may be configured to receive x-rays incident on a substrate with the substrate-side contact biased so that the lowest mobility carrier is collected by the substrate side contact. For example, when a high hole mobility semiconductor material is used for the conversion layer and a negative bias is applied to a surface of the conversion layer, the photodetector may be configured to receive incident x-rays on a detector surface opposite that of the negatively biased surface. The receipt of x-rays incident on the detector surface opposite that of the negative bias improves the sensitivity of the photodetector and may also improve the semiconductor material's radiation hardness. For another example, when a high electron mobility semiconductor material is used for the conversion layer and a positive bias is applied to the surface of the conversion layer, the photodetector may be configured to receive x-rays incident on a detector surface opposite that of the positively biased surface (e.g., x-rays received through a substrate).
Photodetector 200 may be biased in one of two manners with x-rays 250 and 260 incident on either side of the detector. As illustrated in
This phenomenon may be explained by electron/hole collection rates in the conversion layer 220. Electrons and holes are generated in pairs when an x-ray strikes and knocks an electron from the crystal lattice, typically near the surface at which the x-ray enters. Collection occurs for an electron when it stops moving through the lattice (such as by filling a hole or by exiting the lattice). Collection occurs for a hole when an electron fills the hole (although the hole may effectively migrate as electrons shift within the lattice). In PbI2 material, holes have much longer collection lengths (take longer to fill) than electrons.
With top incident x-rays 250, electrons are thus collected quickly when the front or first contact 210 is positively biased. Correspondingly, with bottom incident x-rays 260, a negative bias or voltage at the first or front contact 210 reverses the situation, allowing for quick collection at the second or back/bottom contact 230. Moreover, use of Pd for contact 230 may be expected to present a lower barrier to electron collection than use of ITO, thus allowing for greater sensitivity resulting from faster collection with a Pd contact 230.
As bottom incident x-rays 260 may be the phenomena to be detected, a comparison of top and bottom incident x-ray sensitivity is useful.
Curves 330 and 340 refer to top incident and bottom incident x-rays, respectively, with a negative bias applied to top contact 210. From the curves 330 and 340 of the graph of
In one embodiment, a flat panel x-ray detector 776 may be constructed, for example, as a panel with a matrix of photodetectors 200 with readout electronics to transfer the light intensity of a pixel to a digital signal for processing. The readout electronics may be disposed around the edges of the detector to facilitate reception of incident x-rays on either surface of the detector. The flat panel detector may use, for example, TFT switch matrix coupled to the detectors 200 and capacitors to collect charge produced by the current from detectors 200. The charge is collected, amplified and processed as discussed below in relation to
In the foregoing specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative sense rather than a restrictive sense.
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