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Towards single-chip radiofrequency signal processing via acoustoelectric electron–phonon interactions

Nature Communications

Hackett, Lisa; Miller, Michael R.; Brimigion, Felicia M.; Dominguez, Daniel D.; Peake, Gregory M.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Arterburn, Shawn C.; Friedmann, Thomas A.; Eichenfield, Matthew S.

The addition of active, nonlinear, and nonreciprocal functionalities to passive piezoelectric acoustic wave technologies could enable all-acoustic and therefore ultra-compact radiofrequency signal processors. Toward this goal, we present a heterogeneously integrated acoustoelectric material platform consisting of a 50 nm indium gallium arsenide epitaxial semiconductor film in direct contact with a 41° YX lithium niobate piezoelectric substrate. We then demonstrate three of the main components of an all-acoustic radiofrequency signal processor: passive delay line filters, amplifiers, and circulators. Heterogeneous integration allows for simultaneous, independent optimization of the piezoelectric-acoustic and electronic properties, leading to the highest performing surface acoustic wave amplifiers ever developed in terms of gain per unit length and DC power dissipation, as well as the first-ever demonstrated acoustoelectric circulator with an isolation of 46 dB with a pulsed DC bias. Finally, we describe how the remaining components of an all-acoustic radiofrequency signal processor are an extension of this work.

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Nanoantenna-Enhanced Resonant Detectors for Improved Infrared Detector Performance

Goldflam, Michael G.; Anderson, Evan M.; Fortune, Torben R.; Klem, John F.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Davids, Paul D.; Campione, Salvatore; Pung, Aaron J.; Webster, Preston T.; Weiner, Phillip H.; Finnegan, Patrick S.; Wendt, Joel R.; Wood, Michael G.; Haines, Chris H.; Coon, Wesley T.; Olesberg, Jonathon T.; Shaner, Eric A.; Kadlec, Clark N.; Beechem, Thomas E.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Kim, Jin K.; Peters, D.W.

Abstract not provided.

Monolithically fabricated tunable long-wave infrared detectors based on dynamic graphene metasurfaces

Applied Physics Letters

Goldflam, Michael G.; Ruiz, Isaac R.; Howell, S.W.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Anderson, Evan M.; Wendt, J.R.; Finnegan, P.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Coon, W.; Fortune, Torben R.; Shaner, Eric A.; Kadlec, Clark N.; Olesberg, Jonathon T.; Klem, John F.; Webster, Preston T.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Kim, Jin K.; Peters, D.W.; Beechem, Thomas E.

Here, the design, fabrication, and characterization of an actively tunable long-wave infrared detector, made possible through direct integration of a graphene-enabled metasurface with a conventional type-II superlattice infrared detector, are reported. This structure allows for post-fabrication tuning of the detector spectral response through voltage-induced modification of the carrier density within graphene and, therefore, its plasmonic response. These changes modify the transmittance through the metasurface, which is fabricated monolithically atop the detector, allowing for spectral control of light reaching the detector. Importantly, this structure provides a fabrication-controlled alignment of the metasurface filter to the detector pixel and is entirely solid-state. Using single pixel devices, relative changes in the spectral response exceeding 8% have been realized. These proof-of-concept devices present a path toward solid-state hyperspectral imaging with independent pixel-to-pixel spectral control through a voltage-actuated dynamic response.

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Active and Nonreciprocal Radio-Frequency Acoustic Microsystems

Hackett, Lisa A.; Siddiqui, Aleem M.; Dominguez, Daniel D.; Douglas, James K.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Friedmann, Thomas A.; Peake, Gregory M.; Arterburn, Shawn C.; Miller, Michael R.; Eichenfield, Matthew S.

Radio frequency (RF) devices are becoming more multi-band, increasing the number of filters and other front-end components while simultaneously pushing towards reduced cost, size, weight, and power (CSWaP). One approach to reducing CSWaP is to augment the achievable functionalities of electromechanical/acoustic filtering chips to include "active" and nonlinear functionalities, such as gain and mixing. The acoustoelectric (AE) effect could enable such active acoustic wave devices. We have examined the AE effect with a leaky surface acoustic wave (LSAW) in a monolithic structure of epitaxial indium gallium arsenide (In GaAs) on lithium niobate (LiNb0 3 ). This lead to experimentally demonstrated state-of-the-art SAW amplifier performance in terms of gain per acoustic wavelength, reduced power consumption, and increased power efficiency. We quantitatively compare the amplifier performance to previous notable works and discuss the outlook of active acoustic wave components using this material platform. Ultimately, this could lead to smaller, higher-performance RF signal processors for communications applications.

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High-gain leaky surface acoustic wave amplifier in epitaxial InGaAs on lithium niobate heterostructure

Applied Physics Letters

Hackett, L.; Siddiqui, A.; Dominguez, Daniel D.; Douglas, James K.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Friedmann, Thomas A.; Peake, G.; Arterburn, Shawn C.; Eichenfield, Matthew S.

Active surface acoustic wave components have the potential to transform RF front ends by consolidating functionalities that currently occur across multiple chip technologies, leading to reduced insertion loss from converting back and forth between acoustic and electronic domains in addition to improved size and power efficiency. This letter demonstrates a significant advance in these active devices with a compact, high-gain, and low-power leaky surface acoustic wave amplifier based on the acoustoelectric effect. Devices use an acoustically thin semi-insulating InGaAs surface film on a YX lithium niobate substrate to achieve exceptionally high acoustoelectric interaction strength via an epitaxial In0.53Ga0.47As(P)/InP quaternary layer structure and wafer-scale bonding. We demonstrate 1.9 dB of gain per acoustic wavelength and power consumption of 90 mW for 30 dB of electronic gain. Despite the strong intrinsic leaky propagation loss, 5 dB of terminal gain is obtained for a semiconductor that is only 338 μm long due to state-of-the-art heterogenous integration and an improved material platform.

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Large Acoustoelectric Effect in Wafer Bonded Indium Gallium Arsenide / Lithium Niobate Heterostructure Augmented by Novel Gate Control

2019 20th International Conference on Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems and Eurosensors XXXIII, TRANSDUCERS 2019 and EUROSENSORS XXXIII

Siddiqui, Aleem M.; Hackett, Lisa A.; Dominguez, Daniel D.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Friedmann, Thomas A.; Peake, Gregory M.; Miller, Michael R.; Douglas, James K.; Eichenfield, Matthew S.

This paper demonstrates a monolithic surface acoustic wave amplifier fabricated by state-of-the-art heterogenous integration of a IH-V InGaAs-based epitaxial material stack and LiNb03. Due to the superior properties of the materials employed, we observe electron gain and also non-reciprocal gain in excess of 30dB with reduced power consumption. Additionally, we present a framework for performance optimization as a function of material parameters for a targeted gain. This platform enables further advances in active and non-reciprocal piezoelectric acoustic devices.

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Demonstration of a 9 kV reverse breakdown and 59 mΩ-cm2 specific on-resistance AlGaN/GaN Schottky barrier diode

Solid-State Electronics

Colón, Albert; Douglas, Erica A.; Pope, Andrew J.; Klein, Brianna A.; Stephenson, Chad A.; Van Heukelom, Michael V.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Baca, A.G.

Al0.26Ga0.74N/GaN on SiC lateral Schottky diodes were fabricated with variable anode-to-cathode spacing and were analyzed for blocking and on-state device performance. On-chip normally-on High Electron Mobility Transistor (HEMT) structures were also fabricated for a comparison of blocking characteristics. The Schottky diode displayed an ideality factor of 1.59 with a Ni/AlGaN zero bias barrier height of 1.18 eV and a flat band barrier height of 1.59 eV. For anode-to-cathode spacings between 10 and 100 μm, an increase in median breakdown voltages from 529 V to 8519 V and median specific on-resistance (Ron-sp) from 1.5 to 60.7 mΩ cm2 was observed with an increase in spacing. The highest performing diode had a lateral figure of merit of 1.37 GW/cm2 corresponding to a breakdown voltage upwards of 9 kV and a Ron-sp of 59 mΩ cm2. This corresponds to the highest Schottky diode breakdown voltage reported thus far with an Al0.26Ga0.74N/GaN lateral structure.

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TCAD simulation of a 1 kV 10 A GaN MISFET Device

Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Dickerson, Jeramy R.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Kaplar, Robert K.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Armstrong, Andrew A.; Crawford, Mary H.; Crawford, Mary H.; Crawford, Mary H.; Crawford, Mary H.; Allerman, A.A.; Allerman, A.A.; Allerman, A.A.; Allerman, A.A.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Pickrell, Gregory P.; Pickrell, Gregory P.

Abstract not provided.

Hybrid Integration of III-V Solar Microcells for High-Efficiency Concentrated Photovoltaic Modules

IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics

Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Cederberg, Jeffrey G.; Cruz-Campa, Jose L.; Alford, Charles A.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Nielson, Gregory N.; Okandan, Murat; Sweatt, W.C.; Jared, Bradley H.; Saavedra, Michael; Miller, William; Keeler, Gordon A.; Paap, Scott M.; Mudrick, John; Lentine, Anthony; Resnick, Paul; Gupta, Vipin; Nelson, Jeffrey; Li, Lan; Li, Duanhui; Gu, Tian; Hu, Juejun

The design, fabrication, and performance of InGaAs and InGaP/GaAs microcells are presented. These cells are integrated with a Si wafer providing a path for insertion in hybrid concentrated photovoltaic modules. Comparisons are made between bonded cells and cells fabricated on their native wafer. The bonded cells showed no evidence of degradation in spite of the integration process that involved significant processing including the removal of the III-V substrate.

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Integrating Resonant Structures with IR Detectors

Goldflam, Michael G.; Goldflam, Michael G.; Anderson, Evan M.; Anderson, Evan M.; Campione, Salvatore; Campione, Salvatore; Coon, Wesley T.; Coon, Wesley T.; Davids, Paul D.; Davids, Paul D.; Fortune, Torben R.; Fortune, Torben R.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Kadlec, Clark N.; Kadlec, Clark N.; Kadlec, Emil A.; Kadlec, Emil A.; Kim, Jin K.; Kim, Jin K.; Klem, John F.; Klem, John F.; Shaner, Eric A.; Shaner, Eric A.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Warne, Larry K.; Warne, Larry K.; Wendt, J.R.; Wendt, J.R.; Beechem, Thomas E.; Beechem, Thomas E.; Howell, Stephen W.; Howell, Stephen W.; McDonald, Anthony E.; McDonald, Anthony E.; Ruiz, Isaac R.; Ruiz, Isaac R.

Abstract not provided.

Improved infrared detection using nanoantennas

International Conference on Optical MEMS and Nanophotonics

Peters, D.W.; Sinclair, Michael B.; Goldflam, Michael G.; Warne, Larry K.; Campione, Salvatore; Kim, Jin K.; Davids, Paul D.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Wendt, J.R.; Klem, John F.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Parameswaran, Sivasubramanian P.; Coon, W.T.; Keeler, G.A.; Fortune, Torben R.

We examine integration of a patterned metal nanoantenna (or metasurface) directly onto long-wave infrared detectors. These structures show significantly improved external quantum efficiency compared to their traditional counterparts. We will show simulation and experimental results.

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Resonantly enhanced infrared detectors based on type-II superlattice absorbers

Goldflam, Michael G.; Goldflam, Michael G.; Campione, Salvatore; Campione, Salvatore; Kadlec, Emil A.; Kadlec, Emil A.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Coon, Wesley T.; Coon, Wesley T.; Fortune, Torben R.; Fortune, Torben R.; Parameswaran, Sivasubramanian P.; Parameswaran, Sivasubramanian P.; Keeler, Gordon A.; Keeler, Gordon A.; Klem, John F.; Klem, John F.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Shaner, Eric A.; Shaner, Eric A.; Davids, Paul D.; Davids, Paul D.; Warne, Larry K.; Warne, Larry K.; Wendt, J.R.; Wendt, J.R.; Kim, Jin K.; Kim, Jin K.; Peters, D.W.; Peters, D.W.

Abstract not provided.

Next-generation infrared focal plane arrays for high-responsivity low-noise applications

IEEE Aerospace Conference Proceedings

Goldflam, Michael G.; Hawkins, Samuel D.; Parameswaran, Sivasubramanian P.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Warne, Larry K.; Peters, D.W.; Campione, Salvatore; Coon, W.T.; Keeler, Gordon A.; Shaner, Eric A.; Wendt, J.R.; Kadlec, Emil A.; Fortune, Torben R.; Klem, John F.; Davids, Paul D.; Kim, Jin K.

High-quality infrared focal plane arrays (FPAs) are used in many satellite, astronomical, and terrestrial applications. These applications require highly-sensitive, low-noise FPAs, and therefore do not benefit from advances made in low-cost thermal imagers where reducing cost and enabling high-temperature operation drive device development. Infrared detectors used in FPAs have been made for decades from alloys of mercury cadmium telluride (MCT). These infrared detectors are nearing the believed limit of their performance. This limit, known in the infrared detector community as Rule 07, dictates the dark current floor for MCT detectors, in their traditional architecture, for a given temperature and cutoff wavelength. To overcome the bounds imposed by Rule 07, many groups are working on detector compounds other than MCT. We focus on detectors employing III-V-based gallium-free InAsSb superlattice active regions while also changing the basic architecture of the pixel to improve signal-to-noise. Our architecture relies on a resonant, metallic, subwavelength nanoantenna patterned on the absorber surface, in combination with a Fabry-Pérot cavity, to couple the incoming radiation into tightly confined modes near the nanoantenna. This confinement of the incident energy in a thin layer allows us to greatly reduce the volume of the absorbing layer to a fraction of the free-space wavelength, yielding a corresponding reduction in dark current from spontaneously generated electron-hole pairs in the absorber material. This architecture is detector material agnostic and could be applied to MCT detector structures as well, although we focus on using superlattice antimonide-based detector materials. This detector concept has been applied to both mid-wave (3-5 μm) and longwave (8-12 μm) infrared detectors and absorbers. Here we examine long-wave devices, as these detectors currently have a larger gap between desired device performance and that of currently existing detectors. The measured structures show an external quantum efficiency exceeding 50%. We present a comparison of the modeled and measured photoresponse of these detectors and compare these detectors to currently available commercial detectors using relevant metrics such as external quantum efficiency. We also discuss modeling of crosstalk between adjacent pixels and its influence on the potential for a dual-wavelength detector. Finally, we evaluate potential advances in these detectors that may occur in the near future.

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Results 1–25 of 70
Results 1–25 of 70