Paper
8 September 2006 Detector noise induced by ultra-fast laser
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Irradiation of a photodetector by very short laser pulses was presented as a technique that can remotely alter detector's performance [1]. Recent experimental data demonstrated that energy of femto-second laser pulse transforms almost entirely into thermal energy. Thermal energy may inflict long-lasted changes in the detector that based on lattice structural changes or disorder [2], and semiconductor compound heats up. Those changes may result in detector's responsivity change - to induce a spectral shift that may prevent detection at specific wavelengths and in overall noise increase. Both phenomena may contribute into ultimately non-compensated losses in detectivity. Effect completely reversible if energy level is below energy threshold for melting Eth -therefore integrity of the photodetector is protected during the alteration. In the paper we demonstrate that much longer laser pulses can be used to inflict similar effects in photo- detectors. Laser pulse can be arranged in such a way that combination of energy per pulse, repetition rate, pulse dwell time and duty cycle will not destroy detector or generate signal, but just inflict responsivity shift and noise variance increase. Technique of noise generation by ultra-fast laser is described and analyzed in details with respect to newly presented experimental data.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael K. Rafailov "Detector noise induced by ultra-fast laser", Proc. SPIE 6295, Infrared Detectors and Focal Plane Arrays VIII, 62950P (8 September 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.679654
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Signal to noise ratio

Pulsed laser operation

Signal detection

Photodetectors

Interference (communication)

Ultrafast phenomena

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