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An all-ZnO microbolometer for infrared imaging

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dc.contributor.author Kesim, Yunus Emre
dc.contributor.author Battal, Enes
dc.contributor.author Tanrikulu, M. Yusuf
dc.contributor.author Okyay, Ali K.
dc.date.accessioned 2019-11-06T08:49:04Z
dc.date.available 2019-11-06T08:49:04Z
dc.date.issued 2014-11
dc.identifier.citation Kesim, Y. E., Battal, E., Tanrikulu, M. Y., & Okyay, A. K. (2014). An all-ZnO microbolometer for infrared imaging. Infrared Physics & Technology, 67, 245-249. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infrared.2014.07.023 tr_TR
dc.identifier.issn 1350-4495
dc.identifier.issn 1879-0275
dc.identifier.uri http://openaccess.adanabtu.edu.tr:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/514
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infrared.2014.07.023
dc.description WOS indeksli yayınlar koleksiyonu. / WOS indexed publications collection.
dc.description.abstract Microbolometers are extensively used for uncooled infrared imaging applications. These imaging units generally employ vanadium oxide or amorphous silicon as the active layer and silicon nitride as the absorber layer. However, using different materials for active and absorber layers increases the fabrication and integration complexity of the pixel structure. In order to reduce fabrication steps and therefore increase the yield and reduce the cost of the imaging arrays, a single layer can be employed both as the absorber and the active material. In this paper, we propose an all-ZnO microbolometer, where atomic layer deposition grown zinc oxide is employed both as the absorber and the active material. Optical constants of ZnO are measured and fed into finite-difference-time-domain simulations where absorption performances of microbolometers with different gap size and ZnO film thicknesses are extracted. Using the results of these optical simulations, thermal simulations are conducted using finite-element-method in order to extract the noise equivalent temperature difference (NETD) and thermal time constant values of several bolometer structures with different gap sizes, arm and film thicknesses. It is shown that the maximum performance of 171 mK can be achieved with a body thickness of 1.1 mu m and arm thickness of 50 nm, while the fastest response with a time constant of 0.32 ms can be achieved with a ZnO thickness of 150 nm both in arms and body. tr_TR
dc.language.iso en tr_TR
dc.publisher INFRARED PHYSICS & TECHNOLOGY / ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV tr_TR
dc.relation.ispartofseries 2014;Volume: 67
dc.subject Uncooled infrared imaging tr_TR
dc.subject Microbolometers
dc.subject Zinc oxide
dc.subject Atomic layer deposition
dc.subject Transparent conductive oxides
dc.title An all-ZnO microbolometer for infrared imaging tr_TR
dc.type Article tr_TR


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