Department of Applied Physics
University PhD Dissertation Defense
Nanometre-Scale Photodetectors Enhanced by Optical Antennas
Liang (Luke) Tang
Research Advisor: Professor David A. B. Miller
June 19, 2008 @ 3:00 P.M.
in
Center for Integrated Systems (CIS-X), Auditorium, Room 101
Abstract
The use of optics to make connections within and between electronic chips has been the subject of research for over 20 years because it could solve many of the problems experienced in electrical systems. A critical challenge for the convergence of optics and electronics is that the micrometre scale of optics is significantly larger than the nanometre scale of modern electronic devices. In the conversion from photons to electrons by photodetectors, this size incompatibility often leads to substantial penalties in power dissipation, area, latency and noise. A photodetector can be made smaller by using a subwavelength active region which, however, could result in very low responsivity because of the diffraction limit of the light.
In our first approach to tackle this problem, we use a C-shaped nano-aperture antenna in a thin metal layer to enhance the photocurrent response of a subwavelength photodetector. The work is the first demonstration of a plasmonic-enhanced semiconductor photodetector at near-infrared wavelengths. In our second approach, we exploit the idea of a dipole antenna from radio waves, but at near infrared wavelengths (~ 1.3 µm), to concentrate radiation into a nanometre-scale Ge photodetector. Despite the small antenna size (~ 380 nm long) and the different properties of metals at such high frequencies (~ 230 THz), the antenna has qualitatively similar behavior to the common radio-frequency half-wave Hertz dipole. It gives a relative enhancement of 20 times in the resulting photocurrent in the subwavelength Ge detector element, which has an active volume of 0.00072 _m3, two orders of magnitude smaller than previously demonstrated detectors at such wavelengths. Finally, we integrate an antenna-enhanced photodetector on a commercial CMOS chip, which is the first demonstration of any plasmonic effect in Si CMOS. Photodetectors are one of the most critical components in optoelectronic integration, and decreasing their size may enable novel chip architectures and ultra-low electrical and optical power operations.
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Wednesday, June 18, 2008
REMINDER- PhD Dissertation Defense for Luke Tang on June 19th
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