Dark current represents a fundamental limiting factor in photodiode performance, establishing the noise floor and constraining detectivity in low-light applications. This comprehensive literature review examines publications covering the physical mechanisms underlying dark current generation and diverse techniques employed for its reduction. Covered mechanisms include diffusion current, Shockley–Read–Hall (SRH) generation–recombination, trap-assisted tunneling, band-to-band tunneling, and surface leakage, each examined with respect to its physical origin and characteristic signatures. Reduction strategies are categorized into thermal management approaches, surface passivation techniques including atomic-layer-deposited aluminum oxide (ALD Al2O3), guard ring architectures (attached, floating, and combined configurations), gettering and defect engineering methods, doping profile optimization, bias voltage management, and advanced device architectures such as pinned photodiodes and black silicon structures. A classification table organizes all the reviewed literature by material system, reduction technique, and key findings. Special emphasis is placed on silicon, germanium, III–V compounds, and emerging material photodiodes relevant to near-infrared detection, CMOS imaging, single-photon avalanche diodes (SPADs), and Time-of-Flight (ToF) applications.
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Alper Ülkü
Ralph Potztal
Tobias Blaettler
Micromachines
Ostschweizer Fachhochschule OST
Rainbow Photonics (Switzerland)
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Ülkü et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d895d86c1944d70ce06f08 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17040458