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  AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGIES
   
  High Quantum Efficiency Charge-Coupled Device
 

APPLICATIONS OF TECHNOLOGY:

   
  This false-color image of the Dumbbell Nebula M27 was taken by the WIYN telescope at the National Optical Astronomy Observatory using a Berkeley Lab 2k x 2k high resistivity, thick p-channel CCD. Photo courtesy of Nigel Sharp, Rich Reed, Dave Dryden, Dave Mills, Doug Williams, Charles Corson, Roger Lynds and Arjun Dey/NOAO/WIYN/NSF.
 
     
  • Low-level light imaging (Astronomical research, Raman Spectroscopy)


ADVANTAGES:

  • Back illuminated
  • High near-IR quantum efficiency without fringing
  • Excellent broadband wavelength response
  • Fully depleted for improved spatial resolution
  • Simplified fabrication
  • Superior radiation hardness


ABSTRACT:

Stephen Holland at Berkeley Lab has developed a p-channel CCD with high quantum efficiency in the blue and near infrared wavelengths by combining a high-resistivity silicon substrate and a backside contact layer that allows for over-depleted operation. Tests on the Berkeley Lab CCD at Lick Observatory, the National Optical Astronomy Observatory, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory have shown significantly higher quantum efficiencies in the near-IR region when compared to conventional, thinned CCDs. The high quantum efficiency extends to wavelengths of approximately 1 µm.

This technology maintains all the advantages of back illumination in the blue wavelengths, with the additional benefits of simpler fabrication, improved red wavelength quantum efficiency, including the virtual elimination of fringing effects, and improved spatial resolution.

Conventional methods for overcoming poor blue-wavelength performance require CCDs to be thinned to 10-20 µm - thinner than a human hair. This thinning is accomplished through expensive chemical processing. However, longer red and infrared wavelength performance is sacrificed at those thicknesses. In contrast, the Berkeley Lab high quantum efficiency CCDs only need to be thinned to 200-250 µm, which can be achieved using a simple mechanical process. It is also possible to perform the process for back illumination at wafer level for 150 mm diameter wafers.

STATUS:

  • U.S. Patent #6,259,085. Available for licensing in all fields of use

FOR MORE INFORMATION SEE:

Bebek, C.J., Groom, D.E., Holland, S.E., Kolbe, W.F., Palaio, N.P., Roe, N.A., Turko, B.T., Wang, G., “Development of Fully Depleted, Back-Illuminated Charge Coupled Devices,” Proc. SPIE 2004, 5499, 10.

Holland, S.E., Groom, D.E., Palaio, N.P., Stover, R. J., Wei, M., “Fully Depleted, Back-Illuminated Charge-Coupled Devices Fabricated on High-Resistivity Silicon,” IEEE Trans. Electron Dev. 2003, 50, 225-238.

and

http://www-ccd.lbl.gov/

REFERENCE NUMBER: IB-1204a

SEE THESE OTHER BERKELEY LAB TECHNOLOGIES IN THIS FIELD:

 

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CONTACT:

Technology Transfer Department
E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
MS 90-1070
Berkeley, CA 94720
(510) 486-6467 FAX: (510) 486-6457
TTD@lbl.gov
   
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