KEYWORDS: Sensors, Interfaces, Photodetectors, Amorphous silicon, Silicon, High dynamic range imaging, Electrodes, Medical imaging, PIN photodiodes, Thin films
Previously a-Si:H metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) lateral detectors for indirect medical imaging applications had been proposed by our research group. These lateral detectors are attractive due to their ease of fabrication primarily because there is no p+ doped semiconductor layer, thus making it compatible with industry standard amorphous silicon thin film transistor electronics processing. However the earlier devices exhibited high dark current which is problematic for integration mode imaging. In the other words, they were limited in term of dynamic range. In this study, we demonstrate an a-Si:H MSM lateral structure with low dark current, high dynamic range and comparable sensitivity and quantum efficiency to conventional p-i-n photodiodes. These improvements are achieved by the introduction of a thin polymer layer as a blocking contact. The fabricated amorphous silicon based MSM detector exhibits a photo-response of more than 3 orders of magnitude to a green light source (λ = 525nm). In comparison to vertical p-i-n structures, the reported MSM lateral devices show gains in terms of dynamic range, ease of fabrication (no p+ layer), faster speed at the cost of a slightly reduced quantum efficiency. The experimental results of dark and photocurrent measurements as well as the responsivity for two in-house fabricated MSM structures at different bias voltages and light intensity are presented. This results are promising and encourage the development of a-Si:H lateral MSM devices for indirect conversion large area medical imaging applications and especially low cost flat panel computed tomography.
Silicon nanowire photodetectors were fabricated for large area digital imaging applications. An array of silicon
nanowires fabricated by plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) was incorporated into lateral metalsemiconductor-
metal (MSM) photodetectors with 2 μm electrode spacing. A collection efficiency of up to 0.36 and responsivity of 0.136 was measured using an applied bias of -10V. The rise time in response to a blue LED light source was measured to be 35.2 μs.
Amorphous silicon photodiodes are increasingly being used as fundamental components in digital diagnostic medical imaging system including large area chest radiography, mammography and real time fluoroscopy. The intrinsic a-Si:H material (i-a-Si:H), commonly deposited by Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD), is well known to suffer from both light and bias stress induced instabilities over time that can result in an increase in dark current and a decrease in photoconductivity. In contrast, research in Hot-Wire Chemical Vapor Deposition (HWCVD) indicates that a-Si:H films grown by HWCVD can have superior physical and electronic properties to those grown by PECVD.
In this research, we report on the material properties and stability of i-a-Si:H material by comparing the photoconductivity degradation of the HWCVD and PECVD films over time. Then, we discuss the p-i-n diode fabrication process and examine the leakage and photo-current degradation in the HWCVD and PECVD photodiode structures over time via bias and time stress measurements. Also, we investigate the quantum efficiency degradation over time in a-Si:H p-i-n detectors grown by PECVD.
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