The University of Rochester infrared detector group is working together with Teledyne Imaging Sensors to develop mercury cadmium telluride (HgCdTe) 15 μm cutoff wavelength detector arrays for future space missions. To reach the 15-μm cutoff goal, we took an intermediate step by developing four ∼13-μm cutoff wavelength arrays to identify any unforeseen effects related to increasing the cutoff wavelength from the extensively characterized 10-μm cutoff wavelength detector arrays developed for the NEOCam mission. The characterization of the ∼13-μm cutoff wavelength HgCdTe arrays at the University of Rochester allowed us to determine the key dark current mechanisms that limit the performance of these HgCdTe detector arrays at different temperatures and biases when the cutoff wavelength is increased. We present initial dark current and well depth measurements of a 15-μm cutoff array that shows dark current values two orders of magnitude smaller at large reverse bias than would be expected from our previous best structures.
Building on the successful development of the 10-μm mercury cadmium telluride (HgCdTe) detector arrays for the proposed NEOCam mission, the University of Rochester Infrared Detector team and Teledyne Imaging Systems are working together to extend the cutoff wavelength of HgCdTe detector arrays initially to 13 μm, with the ultimate goal of developing 15-μm HgCdTe detector arrays for space and ground-based astronomy. The advantage of HgCdTe detector arrays is that they can operate at higher temperatures than the currently used arsenic doped silicon detector arrays at the longer wavelengths. Our infrared detector team at the University of Rochester has received and tested four 13-μm detector arrays from Teledyne Imaging Systems with three different pixel designs, two of which are meant to reduce quantum tunneling dark current. The pixel design of one of these arrays has mitigated the effects of quantum tunneling dark currents for which we have been able to achieve, at a temperature of 28 K and applied bias of 350 mV, a well depth of at least 75k
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