10
-3
10
-1
10
1
10
3
10
-5
10
-3
10
-1
10
1
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
-1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2
-0.2-0.4
-0.6
-0.8
-1.0
0.0
V
op
=-100 mVV
GR
=-300 mV
0.2
Voltage (V)
 R
D
A (Ω.cm²)
T=80K
T=80K
 J
dark
 (A/cm²)
c)
b)
 
 Normalized PR
a)
T=80K
 
Figure  11:  Experimental  characterizations  of  a  Ga-
containing XBp T2SL detector device. From top to bottom : 
(a) normalized PR, (b) dark current density J
dark
,  (c) 
differential resistance area product (R
d
A) as a function  of 
the voltage at T = 80K. Two particular bias are identified : 
The operating bias V
op
 and the V
GR
 bias for which the G-R 
current begins to dominate the dark current of the diode. 
4  CONCLUSIONS 
InAs/InAsSb  Ga-free  XBn  T2SL  MWIR  and 
InAs/GaSb  Ga-containing  XBp  T2SL  LWIR 
quantum  detectors  have  been  fabricated  and 
characterized. 
These photodetectors showed cut-off wavelength 
around  4.2µm  at  150K  and  10.5µm  at  80K, 
respectively.  Dark  current  density  values,  extracted 
from J(V) measurements, are equal to 2x10
-6
 A/cm
2
 
at 150K for the Ga-free device and 8x10
-4
 A/cm
2
 for 
the Ga-containing one.  
Compared to the state of the art (i.e; the Rule 07 
(Tennant,  2008)),  these  values  are  from  two  to  one 
decades higher, respectively. Concerning the Ga-free 
T2SL, such result is due to the presence of GR dark 
current at operating bias. Improvement in the design 
and on the control of doping layers during the MBE 
growth are necessary to suppress this behaviour and 
will be the subject of forthcoming studies. For the Ga-
containing  T2SL,  the origin  of  high  dark current is 
different. The current of the device is dominated by 
diffusion  current  at  operating  bias  but  the 
performance  is  penalized  by  the  well-known  poor 
lifetime  value  of  minority  carriers  in  Ga-containing 
T2SL  (Svensson,  2011).  A  solution  would  be  the 
development  of  Ga-free  T2SL  quantum  detector 
structure dedicated for the LWIR spectral domain. 
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 
This  work  was  partially  funded  by  the  French 
“Investment  for  the  Future”  program  (EquipEx 
EXTRA, ANR 11-EQPX-0016), by the ESA contract 
number  4000116260/16/NL/BJ  and  by  the  French 
ANR under project HOT-MWIR (N° ANR-18-CE24-
0019-01). 
REFERENCES 
Abautret, J., Perez, J.P., Evirgen, A., Martinez, F., Christol, 
P., Fleury, J., Sik, H., Cluzel, R., Ferron, A., Rothman, 
J.,  2013.  Electrical  modeling of  InSb  PiN  photodiode 
for  avalanche  operation,  Journal of Applied Physics, 
113, 183716. 
Baril, N., Brown, A., Maloney, P., Tidrow, M., Lubyshev, 
D., Qui, Y., Fastenau, J.M., Amy W. K. Liu, A.W.K., 
Bandara,  S.,  2016.  Bulk  InAsSb  nBn  photodetectors 
with greater than 5lm cutoff on GaSb, Applied Physics 
Letters, 109, 122104 
Delmas, M., Rodriguez, J.B., Christol, P., 2014. Electrical 
modeling  of  InAs/GaSb  superlattice  mid-wavelength 
infrared  pin  photodiode  to  analyze  experimental  dark 
current characteristics, Journal of Applied Physics, 116, 
113101 
Delmas,  M.,  Rossignol,  R.,  Rodriguez,  J.B.,  Christol,  P., 
2017. Design of InAs/GaSb superlattice infrared barrier 
detectors, Superlattices and Microstructures, 104, 402. 
Durlin, Q., Perez, J.P., Cerutti, L., Rodriguez, J.B., Cerba, 
T., Baron, T., Tournie, E., Christol, P., 2019. Midwave 
infrared barrier detector based on Ga-free InAs/InAsSb 
type-II superlattice grown by molecular beam epitaxy 
on Si substrate, Infrared Physics & Technology 96, 39  
Giard, E., Ribet-Mohamed, I., Jaeck, J., Viale, T., Haïdar, 
R.,  Taalat,  R., Delmas,  M., Rodriguez,  J.B.,  Steveler, 
E.,  Bardou,  N.,  Boulard,  F.,  Christol,  P.,  2014. 
Quantum  efficiency  investigations  of  type-II 
InAs/GaSb  midwave  infrared  superlattice 
photodetectors,  Journal of Applied Physics, 116, 
043101. 
Höglund, L., Rodriguez, J.B., Marcks von Würtemberg, M., 
Naureen,  S.,  Ivanov,  R.,  Asplund,  C.,  Alchaar,  R., 
Christol,  P.,  Rouvié,  A.,  Brocal,  J.,  Saint-Pé,  O., 
Costard,  E.,  2018.  Influence  of  shallow  versus  deep 
etching  on  dark  current  and  quantum  efficiency  in 
InAs/GaSb superlattice photodetectors and focal plane