MPP
Mode
For CCD imagers, there are three main sources
of dark current:
(1) thermal generation and diffusion in the neutral
bulk, (2) thermal generation in the depletion region,
and (3) thermal generation due to surface states
at the silicon-silicon dioxide interface. Of these
sources, the contribution from surface states is
the dominant contributor for multiphase CCD's. Dark
current generation at this interface depends on
two factors: the density of interface states and
the density of free carriers (holes and electrons)
that populate the interface. Electrons that thermally
"hop" from the valence band to an interface
state (sometimes referred to as "a mid-band
state") and to the conduction band produce
a dark e-h pair. The presence of free carriers will
fill interface states and, if the states are completely
populated, will suppress hopping and conduction
and substantially reduce dark current to the bulk
dark level. Normal CCD operation depletes the signal
channel and the interface of free carriers, maximizing
dark current generation. Under depleted conditions,
dark current is determined by the quality of the
silicon-silicon dioxide interface or the density
of mid-band states.
In MPP technology, dark current is significantly
curtailed by inverting the signal-carrying channel
by populating the silicon-silicon dioxide interface
with holes that, as mentioned above, suppress the
hopping conduction process. In fact, MPP CCD technology
has achieved dark floors of 25 pA/square-cm, a factor
400 times lower than non-MPP CCDs.
MPP mode is applied to the CCD by significantly
biasing the array clocks negatively to invert the
n-buried channel and pin the surface potential beneath
each phase-to-substrate potential (hence the name
multi-pinned phase). Biasing the array clocks in
this manner causes holes from the p+ channel stops
to migrate and populate the silicon-silicon dioxide
interface, eliminating surface dark current generation.
Unfortunately, when inverting conventional CCD's,
the sensors full well
capacity is annihilated since the potential
wells within a pixel all assume the same level.
This condition results in severe blooming
up and down the signal-carrying channel, since there
is no preferential location for charge to collect.
To circumvent this difficulty in MPP CCD technology,
a weak implant is employed beneath the phases during
the fabrication of the sensor. The extra implant
creates a potential difference between phases, allowing
charge to accumulate in collecting sites when biased
into inversion.
There are additional advantages of MPP CCD technology
besides eliminating surface dark current. For example,
the charge-transfer efficiency of a CCD generally
degrades with decreasing operating temperature.
Therefore, MPP technology can also assist in the
charge-transfer process since it permits the use
of higher operating temperatures. The MPP CCD also
eliminates residual image, a serious problem that
has plagued low-signal-level CCD users for many
years. Residual image results when the sensor is
either overexposed or when a CCD camera is first
powered up. Under these circumstances, electrons
are found trapped at the silicon-silicon dioxide
interface that slowly de-trap into the pixel's potential
well during the course of an exposure. For very
cold operating temperatures (-120°C), residual charge
may take hours or even days (depending on how long
the sensor integrates) before the level of residual
charge seen is lost into the sensors read-noise
floor. Inverting the CCD causes holes to immediately
recombine with the trapped residual electrons, eliminating
remnant image effects during integration as well
as readout. The implications of the successful implementation
of MPP technology are far-reaching and, for many
applications that formerly required the use of cryogens
(liquid nitrogen) or other bulky and complicated
mechanical refrigeration schemes, CCDs can now use
thermoelectric cooling.