How to tell how sensitive a photodiode is?











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I am looking to buy some new photodiodes for a project. Currently, I have been using expensive photodiodes with a picosecond level rise and fall time and a very small area to pick up light. The problem is that I am not getting much light into the photodiode so the readings are quite low and need to have more of a range.



I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a photodiode is and if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photodiodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.



This is the type of photodiode I am looking for



Any ideas?










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  • Related: Influence of active area of photo diode on sensitivity
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 16:46






  • 1




    Michel Keijzers - I appreciate your efforts, but photodiode is one word. So is picosecond.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:57

















up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1












I am looking to buy some new photodiodes for a project. Currently, I have been using expensive photodiodes with a picosecond level rise and fall time and a very small area to pick up light. The problem is that I am not getting much light into the photodiode so the readings are quite low and need to have more of a range.



I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a photodiode is and if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photodiodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.



This is the type of photodiode I am looking for



Any ideas?










share|improve this question
























  • Related: Influence of active area of photo diode on sensitivity
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 16:46






  • 1




    Michel Keijzers - I appreciate your efforts, but photodiode is one word. So is picosecond.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:57















up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
3
down vote

favorite
1






1





I am looking to buy some new photodiodes for a project. Currently, I have been using expensive photodiodes with a picosecond level rise and fall time and a very small area to pick up light. The problem is that I am not getting much light into the photodiode so the readings are quite low and need to have more of a range.



I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a photodiode is and if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photodiodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.



This is the type of photodiode I am looking for



Any ideas?










share|improve this question















I am looking to buy some new photodiodes for a project. Currently, I have been using expensive photodiodes with a picosecond level rise and fall time and a very small area to pick up light. The problem is that I am not getting much light into the photodiode so the readings are quite low and need to have more of a range.



I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a photodiode is and if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photodiodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.



This is the type of photodiode I am looking for



Any ideas?







sensor infrared photodiode light-sensor






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Dec 12 at 9:47









Brian Rogers

1053




1053










asked Dec 11 at 13:44









James

127




127












  • Related: Influence of active area of photo diode on sensitivity
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 16:46






  • 1




    Michel Keijzers - I appreciate your efforts, but photodiode is one word. So is picosecond.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:57




















  • Related: Influence of active area of photo diode on sensitivity
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 16:46






  • 1




    Michel Keijzers - I appreciate your efforts, but photodiode is one word. So is picosecond.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:57


















Related: Influence of active area of photo diode on sensitivity
– The Photon
Dec 11 at 16:46




Related: Influence of active area of photo diode on sensitivity
– The Photon
Dec 11 at 16:46




1




1




Michel Keijzers - I appreciate your efforts, but photodiode is one word. So is picosecond.
– WhatRoughBeast
Dec 11 at 17:57






Michel Keijzers - I appreciate your efforts, but photodiode is one word. So is picosecond.
– WhatRoughBeast
Dec 11 at 17:57












4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote



accepted











How to tell how sensitive a photodiode is?




There's a curve in your device's datasheet that tells you exactly that:



enter image description here



Combined with the line in the Characteristics table that tells you the sensitivity is 0.55 A/W at 850 nm, this gives you the sensitivity at whatever wavelength you are using.



(Note: in the optical communications field, we'd call this a responsivity curve, not a sensitivity curve. For us, sensitivity is a measure of the minimum detectable signal)




if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photo diodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.




Standard p-i-n photodiodes can't produce more than one carrier pair per photon absorbed, so you won't find any with a dramatically stronger response than this one.



If you are working at one specific wavelength, you might be able to find or custom-order one with an anti-reflective (AR) coating for that wavelength and get near a 25% improvement in responsivity (based on the 80% quantum efficiency spec for this device). This will increase the cost.



Some other solutions:



As others have said, you can use an avalanche photodiode (APD), which has an internal current gain process to effectively increase the responsivity above 1 carrier pair per photon. However these require very carefully controlled high-voltage bias, which will increase your system cost.



Or, if your problem is actually focusing your light beam onto the small device area, you could use a larger device (which will be slower and will tend to be more expensive).



Finally, a solution that hasn't been suggested yet in another answer: You could be sure your light source is chosen to match the peak responsivity wavelength of your O/E.



Another comment: The Mouser page you linked calls this a phototransistor, but the Osram datasheet just calls it a photodiode, and its responsivity is typical for photodiodes, not phototransistors. Another way you can get internal gain in the device is to use an actual phototransistor. I don't use these devices regularly, but I expect they might be relatively slow compared to ordinary photodiodes.






share|improve this answer























  • Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:49










  • I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:49










  • I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:50










  • If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 21:13










  • Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
    – James
    Dec 11 at 21:57


















up vote
7
down vote













Depending on the speed you need, you may well be out of luck.



You state that your current diodes "with a picosecond level rise and fall time", while you link to a PD with 12 nsec rise and fall times. Furthermore, you say that your PDs are "expensive ", but the linked units are only about 6 bucks in onesies, and if you think 6 bucks is expensive for a photodiode, I suggest you need to do some research. Try Digikey or Mouser. So it's not really clear exactly what photodiodes you are talking about.



With that said, silicon photodiodes all have pretty much the same maximum sensitivity, .55 to .65 A/W. And you only get high speed by reducing the capacitance of the chip, which means low sensitivity. So you basically have 3 options.



1) Go to a bigger PD and accept the lower speed. While you have been using very fast units, you have not actually justified your need for speed, so this may be an acceptable course of action. How much speed do you really need?



2) If you really and truly need nsec rise and fall times, keep your current diode and provide a collection lens to increase the amount of light incident on the PD. Yes, this means you'll need to redesign your apparatus, and learn some optics, but that should not be an insuperable problem.



3) Go to an APD (avalanche photodiode). These will respond to lower light levels, and you can get fairly fast units. Of course, you'll also need to learn how to drive the little buggers, but think of it as a learning experience.






share|improve this answer























  • Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 16:43










  • Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:54










  • Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
    – Ruslan
    Dec 11 at 19:10










  • Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:47


















up vote
2
down vote














I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a
photodiode is




The spectral sensitivity is quoted in the data sheet as 0.55 amps per watt so, if you could illuminate the sensitive area (1 sq mm) with 1 milliwatt of light at about 860 nm you'd get 0.55 milliamps produced at the output. The graphs in the data sheet show how this falls away for different light wavelengths.




anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850nm) photodiodes
which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much
light which is what I need




Requests for product recommendations are off-topic. However, you'll always get more signal with a bigger sensitive area but the speed will be proportionally slower.






share|improve this answer





















  • Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 14:11










  • You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
    – Andy aka
    Dec 11 at 14:16












  • thanks, I will have a read through it now
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:41


















up vote
1
down vote













A photomultiplier tube (PMT) can give ~10^6 gain, fast rise times (150 ps) and large sensitive areas (~10 mm dia) - all these specs at the same time!



You can use them to detect (and time the arrival time) of single photons.



Have a look at the websites of Hamamatsu, Newport & Photek.






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    4 Answers
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    4 Answers
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    up vote
    5
    down vote



    accepted











    How to tell how sensitive a photodiode is?




    There's a curve in your device's datasheet that tells you exactly that:



    enter image description here



    Combined with the line in the Characteristics table that tells you the sensitivity is 0.55 A/W at 850 nm, this gives you the sensitivity at whatever wavelength you are using.



    (Note: in the optical communications field, we'd call this a responsivity curve, not a sensitivity curve. For us, sensitivity is a measure of the minimum detectable signal)




    if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photo diodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.




    Standard p-i-n photodiodes can't produce more than one carrier pair per photon absorbed, so you won't find any with a dramatically stronger response than this one.



    If you are working at one specific wavelength, you might be able to find or custom-order one with an anti-reflective (AR) coating for that wavelength and get near a 25% improvement in responsivity (based on the 80% quantum efficiency spec for this device). This will increase the cost.



    Some other solutions:



    As others have said, you can use an avalanche photodiode (APD), which has an internal current gain process to effectively increase the responsivity above 1 carrier pair per photon. However these require very carefully controlled high-voltage bias, which will increase your system cost.



    Or, if your problem is actually focusing your light beam onto the small device area, you could use a larger device (which will be slower and will tend to be more expensive).



    Finally, a solution that hasn't been suggested yet in another answer: You could be sure your light source is chosen to match the peak responsivity wavelength of your O/E.



    Another comment: The Mouser page you linked calls this a phototransistor, but the Osram datasheet just calls it a photodiode, and its responsivity is typical for photodiodes, not phototransistors. Another way you can get internal gain in the device is to use an actual phototransistor. I don't use these devices regularly, but I expect they might be relatively slow compared to ordinary photodiodes.






    share|improve this answer























    • Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:50










    • If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
      – The Photon
      Dec 11 at 21:13










    • Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 21:57















    up vote
    5
    down vote



    accepted











    How to tell how sensitive a photodiode is?




    There's a curve in your device's datasheet that tells you exactly that:



    enter image description here



    Combined with the line in the Characteristics table that tells you the sensitivity is 0.55 A/W at 850 nm, this gives you the sensitivity at whatever wavelength you are using.



    (Note: in the optical communications field, we'd call this a responsivity curve, not a sensitivity curve. For us, sensitivity is a measure of the minimum detectable signal)




    if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photo diodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.




    Standard p-i-n photodiodes can't produce more than one carrier pair per photon absorbed, so you won't find any with a dramatically stronger response than this one.



    If you are working at one specific wavelength, you might be able to find or custom-order one with an anti-reflective (AR) coating for that wavelength and get near a 25% improvement in responsivity (based on the 80% quantum efficiency spec for this device). This will increase the cost.



    Some other solutions:



    As others have said, you can use an avalanche photodiode (APD), which has an internal current gain process to effectively increase the responsivity above 1 carrier pair per photon. However these require very carefully controlled high-voltage bias, which will increase your system cost.



    Or, if your problem is actually focusing your light beam onto the small device area, you could use a larger device (which will be slower and will tend to be more expensive).



    Finally, a solution that hasn't been suggested yet in another answer: You could be sure your light source is chosen to match the peak responsivity wavelength of your O/E.



    Another comment: The Mouser page you linked calls this a phototransistor, but the Osram datasheet just calls it a photodiode, and its responsivity is typical for photodiodes, not phototransistors. Another way you can get internal gain in the device is to use an actual phototransistor. I don't use these devices regularly, but I expect they might be relatively slow compared to ordinary photodiodes.






    share|improve this answer























    • Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:50










    • If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
      – The Photon
      Dec 11 at 21:13










    • Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 21:57













    up vote
    5
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    5
    down vote



    accepted







    How to tell how sensitive a photodiode is?




    There's a curve in your device's datasheet that tells you exactly that:



    enter image description here



    Combined with the line in the Characteristics table that tells you the sensitivity is 0.55 A/W at 850 nm, this gives you the sensitivity at whatever wavelength you are using.



    (Note: in the optical communications field, we'd call this a responsivity curve, not a sensitivity curve. For us, sensitivity is a measure of the minimum detectable signal)




    if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photo diodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.




    Standard p-i-n photodiodes can't produce more than one carrier pair per photon absorbed, so you won't find any with a dramatically stronger response than this one.



    If you are working at one specific wavelength, you might be able to find or custom-order one with an anti-reflective (AR) coating for that wavelength and get near a 25% improvement in responsivity (based on the 80% quantum efficiency spec for this device). This will increase the cost.



    Some other solutions:



    As others have said, you can use an avalanche photodiode (APD), which has an internal current gain process to effectively increase the responsivity above 1 carrier pair per photon. However these require very carefully controlled high-voltage bias, which will increase your system cost.



    Or, if your problem is actually focusing your light beam onto the small device area, you could use a larger device (which will be slower and will tend to be more expensive).



    Finally, a solution that hasn't been suggested yet in another answer: You could be sure your light source is chosen to match the peak responsivity wavelength of your O/E.



    Another comment: The Mouser page you linked calls this a phototransistor, but the Osram datasheet just calls it a photodiode, and its responsivity is typical for photodiodes, not phototransistors. Another way you can get internal gain in the device is to use an actual phototransistor. I don't use these devices regularly, but I expect they might be relatively slow compared to ordinary photodiodes.






    share|improve this answer















    How to tell how sensitive a photodiode is?




    There's a curve in your device's datasheet that tells you exactly that:



    enter image description here



    Combined with the line in the Characteristics table that tells you the sensitivity is 0.55 A/W at 850 nm, this gives you the sensitivity at whatever wavelength you are using.



    (Note: in the optical communications field, we'd call this a responsivity curve, not a sensitivity curve. For us, sensitivity is a measure of the minimum detectable signal)




    if anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850 nm) photo diodes which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much light which is what I need.




    Standard p-i-n photodiodes can't produce more than one carrier pair per photon absorbed, so you won't find any with a dramatically stronger response than this one.



    If you are working at one specific wavelength, you might be able to find or custom-order one with an anti-reflective (AR) coating for that wavelength and get near a 25% improvement in responsivity (based on the 80% quantum efficiency spec for this device). This will increase the cost.



    Some other solutions:



    As others have said, you can use an avalanche photodiode (APD), which has an internal current gain process to effectively increase the responsivity above 1 carrier pair per photon. However these require very carefully controlled high-voltage bias, which will increase your system cost.



    Or, if your problem is actually focusing your light beam onto the small device area, you could use a larger device (which will be slower and will tend to be more expensive).



    Finally, a solution that hasn't been suggested yet in another answer: You could be sure your light source is chosen to match the peak responsivity wavelength of your O/E.



    Another comment: The Mouser page you linked calls this a phototransistor, but the Osram datasheet just calls it a photodiode, and its responsivity is typical for photodiodes, not phototransistors. Another way you can get internal gain in the device is to use an actual phototransistor. I don't use these devices regularly, but I expect they might be relatively slow compared to ordinary photodiodes.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 11 at 16:51

























    answered Dec 11 at 16:43









    The Photon

    82.6k396194




    82.6k396194












    • Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:50










    • If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
      – The Photon
      Dec 11 at 21:13










    • Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 21:57


















    • Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:49










    • I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:50










    • If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
      – The Photon
      Dec 11 at 21:13










    • Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
      – James
      Dec 11 at 21:57
















    Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:49




    Hi, Thank you very much for your answer. I understand much better now and thanks for explaining the different terms. I am new to this type of electrical engineering and just electrical engineering in general.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:49












    I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:49




    I have also found some APDs which I am going to look more into osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… they look quite good so I will see
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:49












    I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:50




    I am also guessing that a larger active area will let more light through giving a larger range with the same amount of light?
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:50












    If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 21:13




    If your optics aren't able to focus your beam to a spot smaller than your detector, then increasing the device size will improve your effective response. Another thing, before you start designing 200 V supplies for APDs, have you already considered just using a transimpedance amplifier? And why does that solution not work for you?
    – The Photon
    Dec 11 at 21:13












    Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
    – James
    Dec 11 at 21:57




    Also, does it just amplify the voltages?
    – James
    Dec 11 at 21:57












    up vote
    7
    down vote













    Depending on the speed you need, you may well be out of luck.



    You state that your current diodes "with a picosecond level rise and fall time", while you link to a PD with 12 nsec rise and fall times. Furthermore, you say that your PDs are "expensive ", but the linked units are only about 6 bucks in onesies, and if you think 6 bucks is expensive for a photodiode, I suggest you need to do some research. Try Digikey or Mouser. So it's not really clear exactly what photodiodes you are talking about.



    With that said, silicon photodiodes all have pretty much the same maximum sensitivity, .55 to .65 A/W. And you only get high speed by reducing the capacitance of the chip, which means low sensitivity. So you basically have 3 options.



    1) Go to a bigger PD and accept the lower speed. While you have been using very fast units, you have not actually justified your need for speed, so this may be an acceptable course of action. How much speed do you really need?



    2) If you really and truly need nsec rise and fall times, keep your current diode and provide a collection lens to increase the amount of light incident on the PD. Yes, this means you'll need to redesign your apparatus, and learn some optics, but that should not be an insuperable problem.



    3) Go to an APD (avalanche photodiode). These will respond to lower light levels, and you can get fairly fast units. Of course, you'll also need to learn how to drive the little buggers, but think of it as a learning experience.






    share|improve this answer























    • Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 16:43










    • Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
      – WhatRoughBeast
      Dec 11 at 17:54










    • Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
      – Ruslan
      Dec 11 at 19:10










    • Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:47















    up vote
    7
    down vote













    Depending on the speed you need, you may well be out of luck.



    You state that your current diodes "with a picosecond level rise and fall time", while you link to a PD with 12 nsec rise and fall times. Furthermore, you say that your PDs are "expensive ", but the linked units are only about 6 bucks in onesies, and if you think 6 bucks is expensive for a photodiode, I suggest you need to do some research. Try Digikey or Mouser. So it's not really clear exactly what photodiodes you are talking about.



    With that said, silicon photodiodes all have pretty much the same maximum sensitivity, .55 to .65 A/W. And you only get high speed by reducing the capacitance of the chip, which means low sensitivity. So you basically have 3 options.



    1) Go to a bigger PD and accept the lower speed. While you have been using very fast units, you have not actually justified your need for speed, so this may be an acceptable course of action. How much speed do you really need?



    2) If you really and truly need nsec rise and fall times, keep your current diode and provide a collection lens to increase the amount of light incident on the PD. Yes, this means you'll need to redesign your apparatus, and learn some optics, but that should not be an insuperable problem.



    3) Go to an APD (avalanche photodiode). These will respond to lower light levels, and you can get fairly fast units. Of course, you'll also need to learn how to drive the little buggers, but think of it as a learning experience.






    share|improve this answer























    • Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 16:43










    • Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
      – WhatRoughBeast
      Dec 11 at 17:54










    • Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
      – Ruslan
      Dec 11 at 19:10










    • Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:47













    up vote
    7
    down vote










    up vote
    7
    down vote









    Depending on the speed you need, you may well be out of luck.



    You state that your current diodes "with a picosecond level rise and fall time", while you link to a PD with 12 nsec rise and fall times. Furthermore, you say that your PDs are "expensive ", but the linked units are only about 6 bucks in onesies, and if you think 6 bucks is expensive for a photodiode, I suggest you need to do some research. Try Digikey or Mouser. So it's not really clear exactly what photodiodes you are talking about.



    With that said, silicon photodiodes all have pretty much the same maximum sensitivity, .55 to .65 A/W. And you only get high speed by reducing the capacitance of the chip, which means low sensitivity. So you basically have 3 options.



    1) Go to a bigger PD and accept the lower speed. While you have been using very fast units, you have not actually justified your need for speed, so this may be an acceptable course of action. How much speed do you really need?



    2) If you really and truly need nsec rise and fall times, keep your current diode and provide a collection lens to increase the amount of light incident on the PD. Yes, this means you'll need to redesign your apparatus, and learn some optics, but that should not be an insuperable problem.



    3) Go to an APD (avalanche photodiode). These will respond to lower light levels, and you can get fairly fast units. Of course, you'll also need to learn how to drive the little buggers, but think of it as a learning experience.






    share|improve this answer














    Depending on the speed you need, you may well be out of luck.



    You state that your current diodes "with a picosecond level rise and fall time", while you link to a PD with 12 nsec rise and fall times. Furthermore, you say that your PDs are "expensive ", but the linked units are only about 6 bucks in onesies, and if you think 6 bucks is expensive for a photodiode, I suggest you need to do some research. Try Digikey or Mouser. So it's not really clear exactly what photodiodes you are talking about.



    With that said, silicon photodiodes all have pretty much the same maximum sensitivity, .55 to .65 A/W. And you only get high speed by reducing the capacitance of the chip, which means low sensitivity. So you basically have 3 options.



    1) Go to a bigger PD and accept the lower speed. While you have been using very fast units, you have not actually justified your need for speed, so this may be an acceptable course of action. How much speed do you really need?



    2) If you really and truly need nsec rise and fall times, keep your current diode and provide a collection lens to increase the amount of light incident on the PD. Yes, this means you'll need to redesign your apparatus, and learn some optics, but that should not be an insuperable problem.



    3) Go to an APD (avalanche photodiode). These will respond to lower light levels, and you can get fairly fast units. Of course, you'll also need to learn how to drive the little buggers, but think of it as a learning experience.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 11 at 22:29









    The Photon

    82.6k396194




    82.6k396194










    answered Dec 11 at 14:19









    WhatRoughBeast

    48.8k22874




    48.8k22874












    • Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 16:43










    • Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
      – WhatRoughBeast
      Dec 11 at 17:54










    • Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
      – Ruslan
      Dec 11 at 19:10










    • Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:47


















    • Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 16:43










    • Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
      – WhatRoughBeast
      Dec 11 at 17:54










    • Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
      – Ruslan
      Dec 11 at 19:10










    • Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:47
















    Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 16:43




    Hi, Thanks for the reply. These aren't the photodiodes I was using I can't find the ones I was using but they cost about $150 each. I don't need Picosecond level just nanosecond level. I just need near-infrared photodiodes which are sensitive to very low levels of infrared light.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 16:43












    Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:54




    Sensitive photodiodes are big photodiodes. Big photodiodes are slow photodiodes. Increasing your light collection and/or generation are about the only options available. Or use something other than photodiodes, like APDs.
    – WhatRoughBeast
    Dec 11 at 17:54












    Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
    – Ruslan
    Dec 11 at 19:10




    Here you also have "photo_diodes" and "pico_seconds"... ;)
    – Ruslan
    Dec 11 at 19:10












    Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:47




    Thanks, osioptoelectronics.com/standard-products/silicon-photodiodes/… I am going to look into these
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:47










    up vote
    2
    down vote














    I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a
    photodiode is




    The spectral sensitivity is quoted in the data sheet as 0.55 amps per watt so, if you could illuminate the sensitive area (1 sq mm) with 1 milliwatt of light at about 860 nm you'd get 0.55 milliamps produced at the output. The graphs in the data sheet show how this falls away for different light wavelengths.




    anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850nm) photodiodes
    which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much
    light which is what I need




    Requests for product recommendations are off-topic. However, you'll always get more signal with a bigger sensitive area but the speed will be proportionally slower.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 14:11










    • You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
      – Andy aka
      Dec 11 at 14:16












    • thanks, I will have a read through it now
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:41















    up vote
    2
    down vote














    I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a
    photodiode is




    The spectral sensitivity is quoted in the data sheet as 0.55 amps per watt so, if you could illuminate the sensitive area (1 sq mm) with 1 milliwatt of light at about 860 nm you'd get 0.55 milliamps produced at the output. The graphs in the data sheet show how this falls away for different light wavelengths.




    anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850nm) photodiodes
    which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much
    light which is what I need




    Requests for product recommendations are off-topic. However, you'll always get more signal with a bigger sensitive area but the speed will be proportionally slower.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 14:11










    • You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
      – Andy aka
      Dec 11 at 14:16












    • thanks, I will have a read through it now
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:41













    up vote
    2
    down vote










    up vote
    2
    down vote










    I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a
    photodiode is




    The spectral sensitivity is quoted in the data sheet as 0.55 amps per watt so, if you could illuminate the sensitive area (1 sq mm) with 1 milliwatt of light at about 860 nm you'd get 0.55 milliamps produced at the output. The graphs in the data sheet show how this falls away for different light wavelengths.




    anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850nm) photodiodes
    which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much
    light which is what I need




    Requests for product recommendations are off-topic. However, you'll always get more signal with a bigger sensitive area but the speed will be proportionally slower.






    share|improve this answer













    I was just wondering what the measurement for how sensitive a
    photodiode is




    The spectral sensitivity is quoted in the data sheet as 0.55 amps per watt so, if you could illuminate the sensitive area (1 sq mm) with 1 milliwatt of light at about 860 nm you'd get 0.55 milliamps produced at the output. The graphs in the data sheet show how this falls away for different light wavelengths.




    anyone has any good ideas for near-infrared (800-850nm) photodiodes
    which are extremely sensitive so have a large range from not much
    light which is what I need




    Requests for product recommendations are off-topic. However, you'll always get more signal with a bigger sensitive area but the speed will be proportionally slower.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 11 at 14:00









    Andy aka

    238k10176406




    238k10176406












    • Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 14:11










    • You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
      – Andy aka
      Dec 11 at 14:16












    • thanks, I will have a read through it now
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:41


















    • Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
      – James
      Dec 11 at 14:11










    • You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
      – Andy aka
      Dec 11 at 14:16












    • thanks, I will have a read through it now
      – James
      Dec 11 at 20:41
















    Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 14:11




    Perfect, Thank you very much I will look more into it.
    – James
    Dec 11 at 14:11












    You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
    – Andy aka
    Dec 11 at 14:16






    You might want to read this being as you are a newbie.
    – Andy aka
    Dec 11 at 14:16














    thanks, I will have a read through it now
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:41




    thanks, I will have a read through it now
    – James
    Dec 11 at 20:41










    up vote
    1
    down vote













    A photomultiplier tube (PMT) can give ~10^6 gain, fast rise times (150 ps) and large sensitive areas (~10 mm dia) - all these specs at the same time!



    You can use them to detect (and time the arrival time) of single photons.



    Have a look at the websites of Hamamatsu, Newport & Photek.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      A photomultiplier tube (PMT) can give ~10^6 gain, fast rise times (150 ps) and large sensitive areas (~10 mm dia) - all these specs at the same time!



      You can use them to detect (and time the arrival time) of single photons.



      Have a look at the websites of Hamamatsu, Newport & Photek.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote









        A photomultiplier tube (PMT) can give ~10^6 gain, fast rise times (150 ps) and large sensitive areas (~10 mm dia) - all these specs at the same time!



        You can use them to detect (and time the arrival time) of single photons.



        Have a look at the websites of Hamamatsu, Newport & Photek.






        share|improve this answer












        A photomultiplier tube (PMT) can give ~10^6 gain, fast rise times (150 ps) and large sensitive areas (~10 mm dia) - all these specs at the same time!



        You can use them to detect (and time the arrival time) of single photons.



        Have a look at the websites of Hamamatsu, Newport & Photek.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 11 at 23:39









        D Duck

        805211




        805211






























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