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Arrays of Nano Tunnel Junctions as Infrared Image SensorsInfrared image sensors based on high density rectangular planar arrays of nano tunnel junctions have been proposed. These sensors would differ fundamentally from prior infrared sensors based, variously, on bolometry or conventional semiconductor photodetection. Infrared image sensors based on conventional semiconductor photodetection must typically be cooled to cryogenic temperatures to reduce noise to acceptably low levels. Some bolometer-type infrared sensors can be operated at room temperature, but they exhibit low detectivities and long response times, which limit their utility. The proposed infrared image sensors could be operated at room temperature without incurring excessive noise, and would exhibit high detectivities and short response times. Other advantages would include low power demand, high resolution, and tailorability of spectral response. Neither bolometers nor conventional semiconductor photodetectors, the basic detector units as proposed would partly resemble rectennas. Nanometer-scale tunnel junctions would be created by crossing of nanowires with quantum-mechanical-barrier layers in the form of thin layers of electrically insulating material between them (see figure). A microscopic dipole antenna sized and shaped to respond maximally in the infrared wavelength range that one seeks to detect would be formed integrally with the nanowires at each junction. An incident signal in that wavelength range would become coupled into the antenna and, through the antenna, to the junction. At the junction, the flow of electrons between the crossing wires would be dominated by quantum-mechanical tunneling rather than thermionic emission. Relative to thermionic emission, quantum mechanical tunneling is a fast process.
Document ID
20100021339
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Other - NASA Tech Brief
Authors
Son, Kyung-Ah
(California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Moon, Jeong S.
(HRL Labs., LLC Malibu, CA, United States)
Prokopuk, Nicholas
(Naval Air Warfare Center United States)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
April 1, 2006
Publication Information
Publication: NASA Tech Briefs, April 2006
Subject Category
Electronics And Electrical Engineering
Report/Patent Number
NPO-42587
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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