Light emitting diodes as optical detectors.
Why use LEDs as optical detectors?
Low cost
Long life
Stability
Temperature sensitivity
Available from UV to IR
Narrow band pass
Light emitting diodes (LEDs) are designed to work
as light sources nearly monochromatic and with the advantage of being extremely
stable, compact, durable and cheap. Since LEDs are, themselves, photodiodes,
they can also work as detectors. Significant photocurrents are generated only
for wavelengths that lie under the typical emission curve for a LED; therefore
they act as wavelength selective photodiodes with a relatively narrow band
pass.
Light emitting diodes have been successfully
used in Sun photometers for some applications where LEDs take the place of
interference filters and photo detectors.
LEDs, however, present some problems as well
such as:
-their spectral response bandwidth is much
greater than that of interference filters (typically several tens of nanometers
versus 10 nm or less).
-the wavelengths available are limited to those
of commercial devices that are designed for other purposes. This problem is
reduced by the great variety of LEDs available. However,
-the peak detection wavelength is not, in
general, the same as the peak emission wavelength. As a result the selection of
LEDs becomes problematic since there is no a simple relationship between LED
emission and detection spectra, see figure 1(b).
-the LED band width as detector is wider than
its bandwidth as emitter.
-the LED spectral response varies with
temperature, see figure 1(c).
-the LED is highly sensible to changes in the
direction of the incident light. This is not a problem when the LED is used in
Sun photometers since the sun light covers uniformly the whole LED.
Figure
1.
Spectral responsivity of a light
emitting diode functioning as detector. (b) shows
measurements with diffuse and direct uniform illumination on the LED as well as
the spectral responsivity of the LED as emitter. (c) shows measurements at different temperatures.
We have been doing some measurements on the
spectral, angular and thermal characterization of LEDs functioning as
detectors. In figure 1 we present some results of the measurements of the
spectral responsivity of a LED. We also studied their
non linear response to incident light, that is, we have measured the voltage as
a function of the incident light.
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