Ballistic Electron Emission Luminescence of InAs Quantum Dots Embedded in a GaAs/AlxGa1−xAs Heterostructure

2004 ◽  
Vol 838 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Yi ◽  
Ian Appelbaum ◽  
Kasey J. Russell ◽  
Venkatesh Narayanamurti ◽  
Micah P. Hanson ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTBallistic electron emission luminescence (BEEL) is a further development of ballistic electron emission microscopy (BEEM) combining three-terminal hot electron injection and interband radiative recombination in direct-gap semiconductor materials. By using a planar tunnel-junction emitter rather than a STM tip, a spectrographic analysis of the induced electroluminescence can be performed with the help of much higher current injection level. We demonstrate the operational principle of BEEL in a GaAs/AlxGa1−xAs heterostructure with a layer of InAs quantum dots (QDs) as the optical active layer. The wavelength-resolved BEEL spectra from planar tunnel-junction devices disclose the QD luminescence as a peak near 1.34 eV accompanied with a linear quantum-confined Stark shift. At higher collector voltage, luminescence from bulk states of GaAs peaked at 1.48 eV is observed. The spectrally integrated BEEL intensity as a function of collector voltage fits well with the results from STM tip injection, which is measured in a single-photon-counting mode. Measurement of ballistic electron current spectroscopy is made possible by freezing out the thermionic leakage current at low temperatures. Our results indicate that it is feasible to simultaneously acquire topographic, electronic and photonic information of buried light-emitting semiconductor heterostructures.

2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 042110 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Walachová ◽  
J. Zelinka ◽  
V. Malina ◽  
J. Vaniš ◽  
F. Šroubek ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Maria Concetta Maccarone ◽  
Giovanni La Rosa ◽  
Osvaldo Catalano ◽  
Salvo Giarrusso ◽  
Alberto Segreto ◽  
...  

AbstractUVscope is an instrument, based on a multi-pixel photon detector, developed to support experimental activities for high-energy astrophysics and cosmic ray research. The instrument, working in single photon counting mode, is designed to directly measure light flux in the wavelengths range 300-650 nm. The instrument can be used in a wide field of applications where the knowledge of the nocturnal environmental luminosity is required. Currently, one UVscope instrument is allocated onto the external structure of the ASTRI-Horn Cherenkov telescope devoted to the gamma-ray astronomy at very high energies. Being co-aligned with the ASTRI-Horn camera axis, UVscope can measure the diffuse emission of the night sky background simultaneously with the ASTRI-Horn camera, without any interference with the main telescope data taking procedures. UVscope is properly calibrated and it is used as an independent reference instrument for test and diagnostic of the novel ASTRI-Horn telescope.


2022 ◽  
Vol 17 (01) ◽  
pp. C01036
Author(s):  
P. Grybos ◽  
R. Kleczek ◽  
P. Kmon ◽  
A. Krzyzanowska ◽  
P. Otfinowski ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper presents a readout integrated circuit (IC) of pixel architecture called MPIX (Multithreshold PIXels), designed for CdTe pixel detectors used in X-ray imaging applications. The MPIX IC area is 9.6 mm × 20.3 mm and it is designed in a CMOS 130 nm process. The IC core is a matrix of 96 × 192 square-shaped pixels of 100 µm pitch. Each pixel contains a fast analog front-end followed by four independently working discriminators and four 12-bit ripple counters. Such pixel architecture allows photon processing one by one and selecting the X-ray photons according to their energy (X-ray colour imaging). To fit the different range of applications the MPIX IC has 8 possible different gain settings, and it can process the X-ray photons of energy up to 154 keV. The MPIX chip is bump-bonded to the CdTe 1.5 mm thick pixel sensor with a pixel pitch of 100 µm. To deal with the charge sharing effect coming from a thick semiconductor pixel sensor, multithreshold pattern recognition algorithm is implemented in the readout IC. The implemented algorithm operates both in the analog domain (to recover the total charge spread between neighboring pixels, when a single X-ray photon hits the border of the pixel) and in the digital domain (to allocate a hit position to a single pixel).


Author(s):  
Fabian Olbrich ◽  
Jonatan Höschele ◽  
Matthias Paul ◽  
Jan Kettler ◽  
Simone L. Portalupi ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document