Electron relaxation and transport dynamics in low-temperature-grown GaAs under 1 eV optical excitation was investigated by femtosecond transient transmission measurement and electro-optical sampling measurement in bulk samples and fabricated devices. An increase in the electron lifetime can be observed when the electron density is higher than 3x10(17) cm(-3). This effect is attributed to prolonged electron relaxation due to intervalley scattering of highly excited electrons and associated hot phonon effects. Our conclusion is further supported by bias-dependent studies where intervalley scattering was achieved using high electric fields. (C) 2003 American Institute of Physics.
Traveling-wave photodetectors (TWPDs) are an attractive way to simultaneously maximize external quantum efficiency, electrical bandwidth, and maximum unsaturated output power. We review recent advances in TWPDs. Record high-peak output voltage together with ultrahigh-speed performance has been observed in low-temperature-grown GaAs (LTG-GaAs)-based metal-semiconductor-metal TWPDs at the wavelengths of 800 and 1300 nm. An approach to simultaneously obtain high bandwidth and high external efficiency is a traveling-wave amplifier-photodetector (TAP detector) that combines gain and absorption in either a sequential or simultaneous traveling-wave structure.
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