This patent document relates to circuits, analog devices and telecommunication technologies.
Electronic circuits in most applications are based on electronic circuit elements, such as resistors, capacitors, inductors, transistors, diodes and other circuit modules including amplifiers, oscillators, and switches that are based on the above circuit elements. Such circuits can be implemented in various configurations and can be used in various applications. Electric circuits entirely formed of electrical circuit elements can be limited due to device limitations in the circuit elements. For example, with the ever growing need for compact telecommunication equipment, there is a growing demand for efficient ways in which receiver and transmitter functions can be implemented.
Disclosed are devices, systems, and techniques that can be implemented to ensure that the electric field within an exemplary photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM)is sufficiently uniform so that the performance of a PWBSM-device is not degraded. Further, the disclosed technology can be implemented to ensure that there are no current flow concentrations so as to cause extreme localized heating which can lead to vaporization of electrode material and PWBSM, e.g. as such heating will result in eventual catastrophic failure within a device.
In one aspect, a surface of a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) that is in contact with an electrode is processed to form an electrically conductive layer that conforms to the surface of the PWBSM and forms an equal electrical potential surface. The electrode is placed in contact with the electrically conductive layer that conforms to the surface of the PWBSM as an electrode for the PWBSM. In this configuration, the interface between the electrode and the electrically conductive layer that conforms to the surface of the PWBSM is at a substantially equal electrical potential without localized electrical field enhancements that may cause undesired electrical breakdown under high voltage or high current operating conditions.
In another aspect, an optical transconductance variable resistor includes a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) substrate, whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation that is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof, whereby the material is operable in non-avalanche mode as a variable resistor, and first and second electrodes in contact with the material so that: a first triple junction boundary region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the first electrode, and a second triple junction boundary region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the second electrode, and the PWBSM substrate is located within an internal triple junction region formed between the first and second triple junction boundary regions.
In some implementations of the optical transconductance variable resistor, for example, the region outside the internal triple junction region is an insulator.
In another aspect, an optical transconductance variable resistor includes a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) substrate, whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation that is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof, whereby the material is operable in non-avalanche mode as a variable resistor, a first electrode and a second electrode in contact with the photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material, and in which one of the first and the second electrodes includes at least one aperture to control radiation to within a volume bounded by a triple junction region formed between a first triple junction region and a second triple junction region, in which the first triple junction region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the first electrode, and the second triple junction boundary region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the second electrode.
In some implementations of the optical transconductance variable resistor, for example, the variable resistor can further include a diffusion/dispersion structure is coated with a reflective coating to reflect radiation toward the substrate. In such implementations, for example, the variable resistor can further include a tapered light pipe connected to the at least one radiation aperture of the electrodes for diffusing/dispersing radiation prior to entering the aperture. In such implementations, for example, the electrode having aperture can expand, diffuse, and/or disperse the radiation into the triple junction region. In some implementations of the optical transconductance variable resistor, for example, the other electrode not having the aperture is reflective at the electrode-substrate interface.
The above and other aspects and their implementations are described in greater detail in the drawings, the description and the claims.
A photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) can be used to achieve extremely high electric fields in the material without failure and to conduct large currents because of the very low resistance in a photoconductive mode under proper optical excitation condition. For example, silicon carbide (SiC) can be used to create an electric field exceeding 200 kV/mm and achieve an on resistance of less than one ohm. Current densities of many thousands of amperes of current per square centimeter can therefore be achieved.
Silicon carbide is an example of various PWBSM materials. SiC has a high dielectric breakdown strength, greater than that of most solid materials (e.g., about 4 MV/cm); high thermal conductivity (comparable to that of copper); and low optical absorption. Single crystalline SiC materials can be used to implement a wide bandgap photoconductive switch in circuits and devices. Some examples of SiC and other wide bandgap photoconductive switches are disclosed in patent filings by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, including U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/830,741, entitled “PHOTOCONDUCTIVE SWITCH WITH IMPROVED LIFE SPAN”, filed on Mar. 14, 2013, PCT publication No. WO2010129804 A1, entitled “PHOTOCONDUCTIVE SWITCH PACKAGE” based on PCT application PCT/US2010/033923 filed May 6, 2010, which are incorporated by reference in their entirety as part of the disclosure of this patent document. Other examples of PWBSM materials include gallium nitride, aluminum nitride, boron nitride, and diamond.
In the circuit shown in
For example, a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) can be implemented in various modulation circuits to modulate electrical signals by modulating the conduction response of the PWBSM. This is made possible by the demonstrated transconductance-like properties of PWBSM materials, which have shown fast (<1 ns rise-time), high voltage (>15 kV/mm), high current (>1 kA/cm2), and phototransistor-like modulation capabilities at high modulation frequencies (e.g., greater than 300 MHz and at GHz level), such as for example, in a compact, stacked, transmission-line structure. This capability enables various applications for direct manipulation of high voltage electrical signals. Application examples include, for example, compact high power microwave or RF generation, and energy-modulation of charged particle beams (without use of the photoelectric effect) in directed energy systems, i.e. pulsed power for accelerators and other scientific instruments. See, U.S. Pat. No. 8,563,930 entitled “System and method of modulating electrical signals using photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductors as variable resistors” and issued on Oct. 22, 2013 to assignee Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, which was previously published as U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US 20090261258 A1 on Oct. 22, 2009. The entire disclosures of U.S. Pat. No. 8,563,930 and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US 20090261258 A1 are incorporated by reference as part of the disclosure of this patent document.
The photoconductivity of SiC and other PWBSMs under optical excitation generally increases with the optical power or energy absorbed by the PWBSM material. This property of PWBSMs can be used to construct a PWBSM circuit to function as radiation (e.g. light)-controlled resistors, whose resistance decreases when the PWBSM is exposed to radiation or when the optical power or energy of the radiation is increased. However, the photoconductivity of SiC and other PWBSMs exhibits a non-saturated, linear response region when the optical power or energy is below a threshold and a saturated region when the optical power or energy is at or beyond the threshold.
The data in
In the example in
In the device in
The high electric field levels and current densities in PWBSM devices disclosed in this document present a unique technical issue in managing localized high field spots at the interfaces between the electrodes and the PWBSM material surfaces. For example, a failure in a PWBSM material can be attributed to electric field enhancements due to a localized increase in the electric field above the global average electric field. This electric field enhancement can be characterized as the ratio of the maximum electric field divided by the average electric field. When the enhanced electric field exceeds the electric field strength of the PWBSM material, the material can fail by electrical breakdown. Thus, electric field enhancements must be minimized in PWBSM materials in the devices or circuits disclosed herein.
One method to minimize these enhancements in the PWBSM is by implementing a planar geometry for at least one of the electrodes. Referring to
By contrast, the use of “leads” like those shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,192,387 by Goodman, entitled “ELECTRO-OPTICAL DEVICE FOR PRODUCING A MODULATED VOLTAGE”, becomes inherently problematic when used with the high field and current density capability of the PWBSM. For example, “leads” generally have small aspect ratios (e.g., width divided by the height of the conductor). Typically, leads would have aspect ratios of 1.0 to 2.0 whereas strips would have aspect ratios of 5.0 and greater.
In a high electric field, applications such as the PWBSM is capable of, lead type conductors will generate an enhanced electric field and would nullify the advantages of the PWBSM. For example, in such a geometry, the electric field enhancement increases as a log function for smaller conductors and thus is not well suited for a high electric field devices. It is understandable why Goodman did not anticipate the aforementioned problems with this type of geometry simply because of the breakdown voltages of photosensitive means available during that time were very limited. For example, it is understood that CdSe begins to show initial breakdown type behavior at electric fields less that 10 V/mm. That electric field level is at least four orders of magnitude less than that of an exemplary PWBSM. Thus, to achieve a high field within a PWBSM, modifications are required in that geometry to carefully ensure that enhanced electric fields are eliminated. Further, the typical on resistance of the materials that Goodman cites are on the order of 100-200 ohm resistance. Devices of Goodman can only operate at a low electric fields, and practical currents are well below 1 ampere. However, because the PWBSM can be operated at high fields with low on resistance, currents can be very significant. Thus, technology is required to ensure that the currents are relatively uniform.
Referring back to
In contrast, the contact points and voids at the interface between the contacting surface of the electrode and the conformal conductive layer in the structure in
For better mechanical stability and thermal conductivity, the gaps at the interface between the contacting surface of the electrode and the conformal conductive layer in the structure in
Therefore, disclosed are devices, systems, and techniques that can be implemented to ensure that the electric field within an exemplary PWBSM is sufficiently uniform so that the performance of a PWBSM-device is not degraded by localized contact points that are subject to electric field enhancements and breakdown. Further, the disclosed technology can be implemented to ensure that there are no current flow concentrations so as to cause extreme localized heating which can lead to vaporization of electrode material and PWBSM, e.g. as such heating will result in eventual catastrophic failure within a device.
In one aspect, an optical transconductance variable resistor includes a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) substrate, whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation that is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof, whereby the material is operable in non-avalanche mode as a variable resistor, and first and second electrodes in contact with the material so that: a first triple junction boundary region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the first electrode, and a second triple junction boundary region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the second electrode, and the PWBSM substrate is located within an internal triple junction region formed between the first and second triple junction boundary regions.
In some implementations of the optical transconductance variable resistor, for example, the region outside the internal triple junction region is an insulator.
In another aspect, an optical transconductance variable resistor includes a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) substrate, whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation that is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof, whereby the material is operable in non-avalanche mode as a variable resistor, a first electrode and a second electrode in contact with the photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material, and in which one of the first and the second electrodes includes at least one aperture to control radiation to within a volume bounded by a triple junction region. In some examples, the triple junction region is formed between a first triple junction region and a second triple junction region, in which the first triple junction region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the first electrode, and the second triple junction boundary region is formed between the PWBSM substrate and the second electrode.
In some implementations of the optical transconductance variable resistor, for example, the variable resistor can further include a diffusion/dispersion structure is coated with a reflective coating to reflect radiation toward the substrate. In such implementations, for example, the variable resistor can further include a tapered light pipe connected to the at least one radiation aperture of the electrodes for diffusing/dispersing radiation prior to entering the aperture. In such implementations, for example, the electrode having aperture can expand, diffuse, and/or disperse the radiation into the triple junction region. In some implementations of the optical transconductance variable resistor, for example, the other electrode not having the aperture is reflective at the electrode-substrate interface.
In another aspect of the disclosed technology, a system for producing modulated electrical signals includes a variable resistor including a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof to enable operation in non-avalanche mode, a modulated radiation source for producing amplitude-modulated radiation with which to direct upon the variable resistor and modulate the conduction response thereof, and a voltage source and an output port, both operably connected to the variable resistor so that an electrical signal produced at the output port by way of the variable resistor is modulated by the variable resistor so as to have a waveform substantially similar to the amplitude-modulated radiation. The variable resistor includes a first electrode and a second electrode electrically coupled to opposite ends of the PWBSM via a conformal conductive material configured between the electrodes and the PWBSM, in which the conformal conductive material provides a uniform electrical contact over substantially the conducting face of the PWBSM.
In some implementations, for example, the system also can include a unit for relieving the enhancement of the electric field in the PWBSM, in which at least one of the electrodes is used to shape the electric field and is generally planar, convex, concave, or combination thereof. In such implementations, for example, the electrodes can be configured to be generally planar and the combination of concave and convex surfaces maintain an electric field enhancement of less than 2.5
In some implementations of the system, for example, the amplitude-modulated radiation produced by the modulated radiation source modulates the conduction response of the variable resistor within the non-saturation region thereof.
In some implementations of the system, for example, the modulated radiation source is of a type selected from a group consisting of a modulated electromagnetic radiation source, and a modulated particle radiation source. In some implementations of the exemplary system, for example, the modulated electromagnetic radiation source is a modulated light source including: a light source for producing a light beam capable of producing the conduction response in the variable resistor; and an optical modulator for intensity-modulating the light beam. In some implementations of the exemplary system, for example, the modulated electromagnetic radiation source is a modulated x-ray source including: a cathode; an anode conversion target; and a grid electrode for modulating electron production at the cathode with which to direct upon the anode conversion target to produce intensity-modulated x-rays therefrom with which to direct upon the variable resistor to modulate the conduction response thereof. In some implementations of the exemplary system, for example, the modulated particle radiation source can include a radioactive source and a particle modulator for modulating the radioactive particles therefrom with which to direct upon the variable resistor to modulate the conduction response thereof. In some implementations of the exemplary system, for example, the modulated particle radiation source is a modulated electron source including: a cathode; and a grid electrode for modulating electron production at the cathode with which to direct upon the variable resistor to modulate the conduction response thereof. In some implementations of the exemplary system, for example, the modulated particle radiation source can include a particle radiation source having a pointed tip and a particle modulator for modulating the extraction of particles therefrom.
In some implementations of the system, for example, the voltage source, the variable resistor, and the output port are operably connected so that modulating the conduction response of the variable resistor with the amplitude-modulated radiation generates the modulated electrical signal at the output port. In one such implementations for example, the system can further include a load serially connected to the variable resistor with the output port electrically connected across one of the load and the variable resistor. In such implementations, for example, the system can further include a second output port electrically connected across the other one of the load and the variable resistor. In another such implementation, for example, the system can further include a triode including: an anode having an associated voltage Va, a cathode having an associated voltage Vc, and a grid electrode having an associated voltage Vg for controlling triode operation, with the output port connected to one of the anode, the cathode, and the grid electrode to modulate a corresponding one of the voltages Va, Vc, or Vg.
In another such implementation, for example, the system can further include a pulse forming line having a first conductor connected to and pre-charged by the voltage source, and a second conductor parallel to the first conductor and at ground potential, the output port including adjacent output ends of the first and second conductors, and the variable resistor bridging the first and second conductors at a removed location from the output ends. For example, the pulse forming line can have a third conductor parallel to the first conductor and opposite the second conductor, in which the third conductor has an output end adjacent the output end of the first conductor and electrically connected to the second conductor at a removed location from the output ends. In such implementations, for example, the system can further include at least one additional pulse forming line in stacked arrangement with the pulse forming line so that the modulated electrical signals produced at the respective output ports are additive.
In some implementations of the system, for example, the voltage source is a pulse generator, and the system further can include a transmission line having an input end connected to the pulse generator, an output end including the output port, and a photoconductivity-modulated inline section including the variable resistor located between the input and output ends, for propagating an incident voltage pulse from the input end to the output port via the photoconductivity-modulated section, so that modulating the conduction response of the variable resistor with the amplitude-modulated radiation substantially impresses the waveform of the amplitude-modulated radiation to transmitted and reflected portions of the incident voltage pulse. For example, in such implementations, the photoconductivity-modulated section of the transmission line, when not activated, has a matching impedance with adjacent sections of the transmission line so as to pass the incident voltage pulse without reflection. For example, in such implementations, the transmission line can include at least one additional photoconductivity-modulated inline section including another variable resistor, with the modulated radiation source directing the amplitude-modulated radiation to all the photoconductivity-modulated sections. In some implementations, for example, the transmission line can include at least one additional photoconductivity-modulated inline section including another variable resistor, in which the system can further include at least one additional modulated radiation source for producing amplitude-modulated radiation independently of the other modulated radiation source with which to direct upon the additional photoconductivity-modulated section. In some implementations, for example, the system can further include a second output port at the input end of the transmission line for emitting the reflected portions of the incident voltage pulse.
In some implementations of the system, for example, the system can further include at least one additional variable resistor and associated output port; and a phase controller for controlling the phase of a corresponding amplitude-modulated radiation directed upon the respective variable resistors so as to control the phase of the modulated electrical signals at the respective output ports.
In some implementations of the system, for example, the system can further include a transmission device connected to the output port for transmitting the modulated electrical signal. For example, the transmission device can be an antenna. For example, the modulated radiation source produces the amplitude-modulated radiation at a microwave frequency, so that a microwave signal is transmitted via the antenna.
In some implementations of the system, for example, the system can further include an evacuated dielectric wall beam tube having an input end for receiving charged particles, the output port connected along the beam tube so that charged particles present in the beam tube receive an energy modulation corresponding to the modulated electrical signal at the output port so as to produce a modulated charged particle beam.
In another aspect, a method of the disclosed technology for producing modulated electrical signals includes providing a voltage source, an output port, and a variable resistor operably connected to the voltage source and the output port so that an electrical signal is produced at the output port by way of the variable resistor, the variable resistor comprising a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof, whereby the variable resistor is operable in non-avalanche mode; and directing upon the variable resistor amplitude-modulated radiation produced by a modulated radiation source to modulate the conduction response of the variable resistor, so that the electrical signal produced at the output port is modulated by the variable resistor so as to have a waveform substantially similar to the amplitude-modulated radiation.
In another aspect, a photoconductivity-modulated variable resistor device of the disclosed technology includes a photoconductive wide bandgap semiconductor material (PWBSM) whose conduction response to changes in amplitude of incident radiation is substantially linear throughout a non-saturation region thereof, whereby the PWBSM is operable in non-avalanche mode as a variable resistor; and a modulated radiation source for producing amplitude-modulated radiation with which to direct upon the PWBSM so that the conduction response induced thereby in the PWBSM has a waveform substantially similar to the amplitude-modulated radiation.
While this patent document contains many specifics, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of any invention or of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features that may be specific to particular embodiments of particular inventions. Certain features that are described in this patent document in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or variation of a subcombination.
Similarly, while operations are depicted in the drawings in a particular order, this should not be understood as requiring that such operations be performed in the particular order shown or in sequential order, or that all illustrated operations be performed, to achieve desirable results. Moreover, the separation of various system components in the embodiments described in this patent document should not be understood as requiring such separation in all embodiments.
Only a few implementations and examples are described and other implementations, enhancements and variations can be made based on what is described and illustrated in this patent document.
This patent document claims benefit of priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/852,127, entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD OF MODULATING HIGH VOLTAGE ELECTRICAL SIGNALS USING PHOTOCONDUCTIVE WIDE BANDGAP SEMICONDUCTOR AS VARIABLE RESISTORS”, and filed on Mar. 15, 2013. The entire content of the aforementioned patent application is incorporated by reference as part of the disclosure of this patent document.
The United States Government has rights in this invention pursuant to Contract No. DE-AC52-07NA27344 between the U.S. Department of Energy and Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, for the operation of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61852127 | Mar 2013 | US |