학술논문

Indirect light absorption model for highly strained silicon infrared sensors
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
J. Appl. Phys. 130, 055105 (2021)
Subject
Physics - Applied Physics
Language
Abstract
The optical properties of silicon can be greatly tuned by applying strain and opening new perspectives, particularly in applications where infrared is key. In this work, we use a recent model for the indirect light absorption of silicon and include the effects of tensile and compressive uniaxial strains. The model is based on material properties such as the bandgap, the conduction and valence band density-of-states effective masses, and the phonon frequencies, which are obtained from first principles including strain up to +2% along the [110] and [111] directions. We show that the limit of absorption can increase from 1.14 (1.09) to 1.35 $\mu$m (0.92 eV) under 2% strain and that the absorption increases by a factor of 55 for the zero-strain cutoff wavelength of 1.14 $\mu$m when a 2% compressive strain is applied in the [110] direction. We demonstrate that this effect is mainly due to the impact of strain on the electronic bandgaps of silicon, directly followed by the valence band density-of-states effective mass.
Comment: Published in Journal of Applied Physics (4 August 2021)