Yiren
Chen
*a,
Jiawang
Shi
ab,
Zhiwei
Zhang
a,
Guoqing
Miao
a,
Hong
Jiang
a and
Hang
Song
*a
aState Key Laboratory of Luminescence and Applications, Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun 130033, China. E-mail: chenyr@ciomp.ac.cn; songh@ciomp.ac.cn
bSchool of Optoelectronics, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
First published on 15th May 2023
An AlGaN-based solar-blind UV heterojunction bipolar phototransistor (HBPT) with an AlGaN-based multiple quantum well (MQW) layer as the light absorption layer is proposed in this paper. On the basis of the individually optimized growth of the MQW light absorption layer and the p-type AlGaN base layer, the material growth, device preparation, and performance evaluation of the solar-blind UV HBPT are investigated in detail. The evaluations show that the fabricated two-end NPN-type phototransistor with a floating base presents a low dark current density of about 4.8 × 10−8 A cm−2 and a high peak responsivity of 4.55 A W−1 at 267 nm as the device is biased at a VCE of 12 V, corresponding to a high EQE of 2.1 × 103%. It also exhibits a quick transient response speed of 13.47 ns at a lower bias voltage (VCE = 3 V). These results favorably prove the feasibility of realizing a high performance solar-blind UV photodetector based on the AlGaN-based MQW HBPT.
In the military field, one of the core applications of solar-blind UV photodetectors is missile approaching warning.4 As is well known, in modern warfare, missiles are mainly used to attack the strategic targets that determine the victory or defeat of a war and even the survival of a country. Thus, the accurate and effective warning of incoming missiles appears to be crucial. Missiles mainly propelled by solid or liquid fuels can produce UV radiation in the process of flying, originating from three sources: (i) the unburned solid fuel particles in the exhaust plume of the missiles during flight will mix with the air outside the engine and secondary combustion occurs, resulting in high temperature particle radiation.5 (ii) The chemical luminescence caused by CO–O recombination will also be emitted during the secondary combustion of unburned fuel.6 (iii) The skin of the missile rigging and tank emits UV radiation by friction with the atmosphere during the reentry segment.4 Both of the high temperature particle radiation and the chemical luminescence contain strong solar-blind UV components.7,8 Therefore, the solar-blind UV radiation in the missile exhaust plume detected using the corresponding solar-blind UV photodetectors can realize the approaching alarm of incoming missiles with a very low false alarm rate, which ensures the security of important strategic targets in the environment of precise attack war. In the civil field, there is also a huge market demand for solar-blind UV photodetectors in corona detection and inspection of (ultra) high voltage power grids.9 Since the radiation of the leakage corona of (ultra) high voltage transmission lines is mainly concentrated in the solar-blind UV band, using solar-blind UV photodetectors to detect the radiation of discharge corona can not only realize real-time monitoring day and night against the operation status of (ultra) high voltage transmission lines, but also implement troubleshooting and maintenance timely and accurately. It is of great significance for ensuring the operation safety of national high voltage power grids, preserving the economic development and people's normal life order, and guaranteeing the sustainable development of the national energy strategy.
Although the application prospect of a solar-blind UV photodetector is attractive, its development still faces many crucial problems. Typically, the energy of solar blind UV photons is larger than that of visible and infrared photons, which means that the number of solar blind UV photons is much less than that of visible and infrared photons under the same irradiation power. Moreover, the combination of scattering and absorption due to the interaction between the solar-blind UV photons and the molecules and suspended particles in the atmosphere makes the solar-blind UV signal to rapidly attenuate.10 These factors pose a serious challenge to the sensitivity of solar-blind UV photodetectors. Only the detectors with high gain and low noise can meet the detection requirements of the extremely weak solar-blind UV signal. The conventionally used high gain solar-blind UV photodetectors are mainly photocathode-based photomultiplier tubes (PMTs)11 or photomultiplication type organic photodetectors.12,13 Although both have the advantages of high gain and low noise, their broadband response characteristics lead to the fact that in order to achieve sheer solar-blind UV detection, it must rely on high cutoff ratio solar-blind UV bandpass filters, and the detection ability is thus seriously restrained by the transmittance of the filter.3,14
In order to get rid of the dependence on filters, researchers concentrate on developing solar-blind UV photodetectors with an intrinsic cut-off response spectrum. Nitride semiconductors have the potential to solve the above-mentioned issues. Since the direct bandgap of AlGaN ternary alloy ranges from 3.4 to 6.2 eV at room temperature, and the corresponding spectrum ranges from 200 nm to 365 nm, it is suitable for developing solar-blind UV photosensors by adjusting the Al content.2,15 Furthermore, it can be used for developing full solid-state, durable, low-cost and high UV/visible rejection ratio solar-blind UV photodetectors due to its excellent physical and chemical properties.16 Revolving around the research of gain-type, full-solid AlGaN-based solar-blind UV photodetectors, avalanche photodiodes (APDs) based on a separate absorption and multiplication (SAM) structure have attracted much attention and the gain of AlGaN APDs can reach an order of 103 to date.17,18 Apart from the SAM structure APDs, phototransistors in the form of the AlGaN heterojunction high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) are also proposed as gain-type solar-blind UV photodetectors to achieve high gains.15,19,20 However, the fabrication of gain-type solar-blind UV photodetectors based on the heterojunction bipolar phototransistor (HBPT) is still a big challenge. The reasons can be attributed to the following two points. On the one hand, it is difficult to obtain high performance p-AlGaN with a high Al content. For bipolar phototransistors, no matter NPN type or PNP type, p-type materials are indispensable. However, the development of AlGaN-based short-wavelength optoelectronic devices has been seriously limited by p-type materials for the reason that high activation energy leads to very low p-type doping efficiency of AlGaN with a high Al content, because of the strong localization of the acceptors making them become deep level dopants.21,22 On the other hand, low photoelectric conversion efficiency resulting from the weak light absorption capacity of the PN junction cannot provide sufficient base injection current for conventional NPN or PNP type bipolar phototransistors.
Herein, we propose an NPN type solar-blind UV HBPT device structure with AlGaN-based multiple quantum wells (MQWs) as the optical absorption region and a superlattice structure material with the alternate Mg uniformly doped layer and Mg-delta doped layer as the p-type material. The introduction of AlGaN-based MQWs instead of ordinary intrinsic AlGaN single layers into the PN junction to achieve photoelectric conversion has the advantage of high quantum efficiency, which plays an important role in solving the problem of the weak light absorption capacity of the PN junction. An effective way of the non-equilibrium Mg doping method is adopted to solve the low doping efficiency of p-AlGaN and to improve its electrical performance. Accompanied by the individual optimized growth of the MQW optical absorption layer and the p-type layer via metal–organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), the full structural material of an NPN type solar-blind UV HBPT equipped with an AlGaN-based MQW optical absorption layer is grown, and finally, the performance of the solar-blind UV HBPT is carefully evaluated after device preparation. The results reveal the feasibility of realizing high gain solar-blind UV photodetectors based on the AlGaN-based NPN type HBPT with the MQW optical absorption region.
Fig. 1 Schematic band diagram of the proposed NPN type solar-blind UV HBPT with the AlGaN-based MQW absorption layer. |
Fig. 2 PL spectra of both Al0.45Ga0.55N/AlN MQWs and Al0.45Ga0.55N/Al0.5Ga0.5N MQWs. The inset shows their epitaxial structures. |
With regard to the p-type layer as the base of the HBPT, optimized growth is also carried out using single uniform Mg doping and the combination of uniform Mg doping and Mg-δ doping for comparison. After evaluating the Hall effect measurement, the results shown in Table S1 of the ESI† demonstrate that the carrier concentration and the hole mobility of the uniform Mg-doping sample cannot be measured due to its high impedance while those of periodic uniform Mg doping and Mg-δ doping samples are 2.16 × 1018 cm−3 and 0.4602 cm2 V−1 s−1, respectively. The electrical properties of the p-type AlGaN material are greatly improved in the periodic uniform Mg doping and Mg-δ doping samples, mainly originating from the non-equilibrium superlattice doping technique. As demonstrated in the Experimental section, the periodic uniform Mg doping and Mg-δ doping samples have a typical superlattice structure. It is verified that the vertical miniband transport of holes occurs in the p-type AlGaN superlattices, which significantly reduces the effective activation energy of Mg dopants.21 Meanwhile, the ultrathin Mg-δ layer plays a role of the non-equilibrium doping layer that produces a new band edge and thus further tunes the activation energy.22 Therefore, it is a good choice to use the periodic uniform Mg doping and Mg-δ doping methods to prepare the base of the NPN-type AlGaN-based phototransistor based on the above comparative study.
After obtaining the optimized growth parameters of the optical absorption layer and the base layer, the whole structural material of the designed HBPT (Fig. 3(a)) is implemented by MOCVD. Its corresponding in situ growth monitoring curves are shown in Fig. 3(b), in which the growth begins at the Al0.6Ga0.4N/AlN superlattices (SLs) and ends at annealing at 860 °C for 20 min. As seen in Fig. 3(b), except for the MQW optical absorption layer, the other functional layers use the same growth temperature. The difference of the Al content is realized by regulating the VAl/VGa ratio while the difference of the carrier concentration in n-type materials is realized by regulating the volume flows of the SiH4 dopant. As to the MQW optical absorption layer, it is obtained by the means of controlling the growth temperature. Fig. 3(c) shows the cross-sectional SEM panorama of the AlGaN-based HBPT material which is strictly prepared in accordance with the designed structure in Fig. 1. The typical characteristic layers such as the superlattice layer, multiple quantum layers and adjacent p-type layer can be clearly distinguished. Fig. 3(d) shows the partial enlargement image of the superlattice layer, multiple quantum layers and its adjacent p-type layer, further indicating the consistency between the material growth and the structural design.
Fig. 4(a) shows the schematic configuration and physical image of the as-fabricated AlGaN-based solar-blind UV HBPT. The detailed device preparation process can be referred to the Experimental section above. It is a typical two-end NPN-type phototransistor with a floating base described by the symbol in Fig. 4(a), which differs from the three-end field effect phototransistor.29,30 In the base open configuration, light incident from the sapphire substrate side can be absorbed by the MQW layer interposed in the base-collector region, producing photo-generated electron–hole pairs. Under the combined action of the applied electric field (VCE > 0) and the built-in electric field of the base-collector (both in the same direction), the photo-generated electron–hole pairs will be separated, and the electrons in them will be swept to the collector (C) as part of the initial photocurrent of the HBPT. Meanwhile, the holes will be driven towards the base (B) and trapped in the floating base (B) region.31 The accumulation of excess holes reduces the energy barrier of the emitter junction, enabling a large number of electrons in the emitter (E) to diffuse across the emitter junction to the collector (C), finally realizing a significant increase of the collector photocurrent (ICPh). Fig. 4(b) presents the collector photocurrent density curves under different wavelengths of incident light in comparison with the dark current density curve without any illumination. As can be seen, the collector photocurrent density increases steadily with VCE. It is at least two orders of magnitude higher than the dark current density. It should be noted that the current dropping and then rising process in the I–V characteristic can be regarded as the zero offset due to the depletion process of the thin p-AlGaN layer (base) under an applied electric field, light field or their combined action.32
The difference of the photocurrent at a certain VCE under different wavelengths of light is originated from the response ability of the AlGaN-based solar-blind HBPT to different wavelengths of light, that is, the different photoelectric conversion efficiency. Fig. 5 shows the measured spectral responsivities and corresponding EQEs (inset) of the AlGaN-based solar-blind HBPT under different bias voltages. At a certain VCE, the spectral responsivity vs. wavelength exhibits a peak value located at around 270 nm. When the VCE is up to 3 V, the peak responsivity reaches 0.266 A W−1 at 267 nm, corresponding to a high EQE of 124%. When the VCE is higher than 3 V, the EQE exceeds 100% for the entire solar-blind UV band, indicating the current amplification in the HBPT. As the VCE further increases, the spectral responsivity and related EQE will further increase. The peak responsivity and EQE can be respectively as high as 4.55 A W−1 and 2.1 × 103% at 267 nm when the VCE reaches a voltage of 12 V. This VCE-related photoelectric gain in the HBPT has been verified to be determined by the transit time of photogenerated electrons across the base (B) and the lifetime of the excess photogenerated holes trapped in the base (B).31,33 In the open base mode, as the VCE increases, the depletion region of the reverse-biased base-collector junction expands, resulting in the decrease of the neutral base width. The extended depletion region can cooperate with MQWs to absorb more photons and thus produce more photogenerated electrons and holes. At the same time, the narrowing of the base width also results in a significant decrease of the transit time for electrons across the base (B). More excess hole traps in the floating base (B) further reducing the energy barrier of the base-emitter junction that facilitates much more electrons in the emitter (E) across it to the collector (C) and amplifies the initial photocurrent.
Fig. 5 Measured spectral responsivities of the AlGaN-based solar-blind UV HBPT under different biases. The inset shows the corresponding EQE in the semi-log scale. |
To further evaluate the performance of our AlGaN-based solar-blind UV HBPT, its transient response is also obtained by the impulse response measurement, as shown in Fig. 6. A 10 mW 266 nm-wavelength pulse laser with a full width at half maximum (FWHM) of 5 ns modulated using a signal generator is coupled through a fiber to the HBPT and a digital sampling oscilloscope timely records the response curve. Fig. 6(a) shows the as-recorded transient response curves, in which the cyan line represents the synchronizing signal of the laser pulse set to a frequency of 10 Hz while the yellow one is on behalf of the temporal response of our HBPT. As can be seen from Fig. 6(b) and (c), the partial enlargement shows a 10–90% rise time of 13.47 ns and a 90–10% decay time of 138.3 ns when the VCE is 3 V, which indicates its relatively good spectral response speed. The different response time at rise and decay processes can be illustrated by the dynamic process of the transient response. AlGaN-based semiconductors are well-known direct bandgap materials. It will absorb the energy of the incident photon higher than its bandgap and directly excite valence band electrons to its conduction band. The electrons in the excited state cannot exist stably, whose energy and momentum will relax towards the minimum value of the valence band (i.e. the base state) soon and eventually release photons again during recombining with the holes. In the process of electrons directly transitioning from the excited state to the base state, it is mainly reflected in very short rise time and decay time. However, generally, the transient response usually presents a slower decay time due to the physical processes such as relaxation, capture and re-release by defect energy levels, and so on.34 In order to intuitively exhibit the comprehensive performance of our AlGaN-based solar-blind UV HBPT, parameter comparison with the reported AlGaN-based solar-blind UV photodetectors is shown in Table 1.
Fig. 6 (a) Measured transient spectral response of the AlGaN-based solar-blind UV HBPT. (b) Partial enlargement of (a). (c) Normalized transient spectral response curve. |
Material | Structure | Peak wavelength (nm) | Dark current or dark current density | Responsivity (A W−1) | Rise time/decay time | EQE (%) | Gain-type | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AlGaN-based | p–i–n | 275 | <2 × 10−9 A cm−2 (−10 V) | ∼0.176 (0 V) | — | ∼89 (−5 V) | No | 35 |
p–i–n | 289 | ∼10−9 A cm−2 (−10 V) | 0.211 (0 V) | — | 92 (0 V) | No | 36 | |
APD (p–i–n–i–n) | 281 | 1.06 × 10−8 A cm−2 (−20 V) | ∼2 (−87 V) | — | — | Yes | 37 | |
p–i–n | ∼271 | 5.89 × 10−9 A (−5 V) | 0.15 (0 V) | 6.5 ns/τ1 = 67 ns, τ2 = 0.95 μs | 68.8 (0 V) | No | 3 | |
HBPT (n–i–p–i–n) | ∼285 | 0.8 × 10−9 A (3 V) | 26.4 (3 V) | — | — | Yes | 31 | |
MSM | 270 | 0.78 × 10−12 A (−10 V) | 1.84 × 103 | 90 ms/τ1 = 53 ms, τ2 = 720 ms | — | Yes | 38 | |
p-MQW-i–n | 233 | ∼10−12 A (<10 V) | 0.425 (0 V) | 224 (0 V) | Yes | 39 | ||
HBPT (n–p-MQW-n) | ∼267 | ∼4.8 × 10−8 A cm−2 (12 V) | 4.55 (12 V) | 13.47 ns/138.3 ns | 2.1 × 103 (12 V) | Yes | This work |
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3tc00317e |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |