A two-electrode, radiation-sensitive junction formed in a semiconductive material.
A junction is formed by two successive regions of a semiconductive material having,
respectively, an excess of electrons (n-type) or holes (p-type). A
bias potential applied to the
detector creates a region at the
interface that is depleted of majority carriers. Each incident photon produces electron-hole
pairs in the depletion region resulting in a measurable signal current. The photodiode
can be operated either with zero
bias in the photovoltaic
mode where the photodiode is actually generating the
electric potential supplied to the load. In a biased
mode, the photoconductive
mode, the reverse current is proportional to the
irradiation. A Schottky-barrier photodiode is constructed by deposition of a metal
film on a
semiconductor surface in such a way that no
interface layer is present. The barrier thickness depends on the impurity
dopant concentration in the
semiconductor layer. The incident radiation generates electon-hole pairs within the depletion region
of the barrier where they are collected efficiently and rapidly by the built-in field.
A
PIN (p-intrinsic-n) diode is a planar diffused diode consisting of a single crystal having
an intrinsic (undoped or compensated) region sandwiched between p- and n-type regions.
A
bias potential applied across the detector depletes the intrinsic region of charge carriers,
constituting the radiation-sensitive detector volume. The number of electron-hole
pairs produced is dependent on the energy of the incident photons. An avalanche photodiode
is a photodiode in which the photogenerated electron-hole pairs are accelerated by
a
bias potential near to breakdown potential so that further electron-hole pairs are formed
leading to
saturation of the photocurrent. This operational
mode for
photon counting is the so-called Geiger
mode, similar to that of the gas filled
Geiger counter. Avalanche photodiodes can also be operated in the proportional
mode.
Source:
PAC, 1995, 67, 1745
(Nomenclature, symbols, units and their usage in spectrochemical analysis-XI. Detection
of radiation (IUPAC Recommendations 1995))
on page 1755