Presentation + Paper
3 June 2022 Radiation damages of silicon avalanche photodiodes in analog mode used in space lidars
Xiaoli Sun, Bryan Blair, Michelle Hofton, Damian Hackett, John Cavanaugh, Jack Bufton, Matthew Linkswiler, Jean-Marie Lauenstein, Philippe Bérard
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Silicon avalanche photodiodes (Si APD) in linear mode operation have been used in spaceborne lidars around Mars, Mercury, Earth, and the Moon over the past 25 years. We have been monitoring the space radiation damages to some of these Si APDs over their mission lifetimes. It was found that the Si APD performance degradation depended on the location of the Si APDs inside the lidars and the thickness of the shielding materials around them. The major accumulated radiation effect was found to be the increase of the dark currents. Most of the radiation damage remained after weeks of annealing at room temperature. Heating the devices at high temperature could anneal the radiation damage to certain extent. Recently, the lidar on the Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) mission captured many individual pulse waveforms from transient radiation events from the Si APDs. We subsequently conducted a single event effects (SEE) test of a GEDI Engineering Model Si APD using 64 MeV protons to reproduce the anomalous pulse waveforms observed from GEDI in orbit. In this paper, we will present a summary of the Si APD performance monitored from several space lidars developed by and operated at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. We will also present the laboratory test data from the recent SEE tests.
Conference Presentation
© (2022) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Xiaoli Sun, Bryan Blair, Michelle Hofton, Damian Hackett, John Cavanaugh, Jack Bufton, Matthew Linkswiler, Jean-Marie Lauenstein, and Philippe Bérard "Radiation damages of silicon avalanche photodiodes in analog mode used in space lidars", Proc. SPIE 12110, Laser Radar Technology and Applications XXVII, 1211006 (3 June 2022); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2619088
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KEYWORDS
Avalanche photodetectors

Silicon

Sensors

LIDAR

Space operations

Avalanche photodiodes

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