G
George Herold
So I was shinning some Cree leds onto a photodiode and measuring the photocurrent. Here’s a plot (opamp bias current ~20pA subtracted from data.)
https://www.dropbox.com/s/atyo4uvsb09fgd7/LED-PD.BMP
Below about 1mA of LED bias current the photo current increases as the 3/2 power of the led current. Which was totally unexpected! (I expected linear.)
I’m making up a hand-waving explanation that’s got a non-radiative recombination channel. And then observing that for radiatvie recombination, it’s not only the number of charge carriers at the boundary.. but they also have to find a ‘dancing partner’ on the other side. So some kind of factor that has do with hole and electron wave function overlap. And for two dimensions that could go as the square root of the number density. (I think.)
Does that make sense? Is this known?
Thanks
George H.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/atyo4uvsb09fgd7/LED-PD.BMP
Below about 1mA of LED bias current the photo current increases as the 3/2 power of the led current. Which was totally unexpected! (I expected linear.)
I’m making up a hand-waving explanation that’s got a non-radiative recombination channel. And then observing that for radiatvie recombination, it’s not only the number of charge carriers at the boundary.. but they also have to find a ‘dancing partner’ on the other side. So some kind of factor that has do with hole and electron wave function overlap. And for two dimensions that could go as the square root of the number density. (I think.)
Does that make sense? Is this known?
Thanks
George H.