Towards a life-time-limited 8-octave-infrared photoconductive germanium detector

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Abstract

Ultrafast, ultra-broad-band photoconductive detector based on heavily doped and highly compensated germanium has been demonstrated. Such a material demonstrates optical sensitivity in the more than 8 octaves, in the infrared, from about 2 mm to about 8 μm. The spectral sensitivity peaks up between 2 THz and 2.5 THz and is slowly reduced towards lower and higher frequencies. The life times of free electrons/holes measured by a pump-probe technique approach a few tenths of picoseconds and remain almost independent on the optical input intensity and on the temperature of a detector in the operation range. During operation, a detector is cooled down to liquid helium temperature but has been approved to detect, with a reduced sensitivity, up to liquid nitrogen temperature. The response time is shorter than 200 ps that is significantly faster than previously reported times.

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Pavlov, S. G., Deßmann, N., Pohl, A., Abrosimov, N. V., Mittendorff, M., Winnerl, S., … Hübers, H. W. (2015). Towards a life-time-limited 8-octave-infrared photoconductive germanium detector. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 647). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/647/1/012070

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