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A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin...

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Page 1: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

March 11 Grand Total; 242 possible

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Page 2: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

En

erg

y

---------

+++++++

Thin Insulator

Thin Conductor

P-Typesemiconductor

N-Type

Excess negative charges

Excess positive charges

Depletion Region

Question: What will happen if apply a positive voltage at A?

a. Nothing, no electrons can moveb. Electrons in N-type will flow to

the right and pile up at insulator until charges balance

c. Electrons will flow from P-type to N-type and pile up at insulator until charges balance

d. Electrons will flow continuously from P to N to A.

A

Page 3: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

En

erg

y

+++++++++

---------

+++++++

Thin Insulator

Thin Conductor

P-Typesemiconductor

N-Type

Excess negative charges

Excess positive charges

Depletion Region

Question: What will happen if apply a positive voltage at A?

Answer is b. Electrons in N-type will flow to the right and pile up at insulator until charges balance

This creates large region of excess positive charges in middle of N-type.

+V

+++++++++

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

Page 4: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

En

erg

y

+++++++++

---------

+++++++

Thin Insulator

Thin Conductor

P-Typesemiconductor

N-Type

+V

+++++++++

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

Page 5: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

En

erg

y

+++++++++

---------

+++++++

Thin Insulator(TRANSPARENT)

Thin Conductor(TRANSPARENT)P-Type

semiconductor

N-Type

+V

+++++++++

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

What will happen to excited

electron?a. fall back down to

empty energy levelb. Move to rightc. Move to leftd. Stay where it is

Page 6: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

+++++++++

---------

+++++++

Thin Insulator

Thin Conductor

P-Typesemiconductor

N-Type

+V

+++++++++

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

e-What will happen to

excited electron?Answer is b. Move to

right. Attracted to center of N-type with lots of positive charge.

Page 7: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

+++++++++

---------

+++++++

Thin Insulator

Thin Conductor

P-Typesemiconductor

N-Type

+V

+++++++++

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

--------

+++++++++

e-e-e-

These e-’s stuck in upper band. No empty energy levels below.

More photons absorbed. More electrons pile up.

Page 8: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Isolating the pixels of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array

-V

+V

-V

-----------

++++++

------

++++++

++++++

++++++

++++++

------

------

------

++++

---

---

----

Electrons pile up… 1 electron per photon absorbed.

Electrons confined to region of positive excess charge (pixel).

After exposure of CCD. Read out each pixel. Move charges as a unit to readout.

little buckets of charge, pass down to end of row and measure

electroncounter

capacitor, measure V created

Page 9: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Columns of pixels move across, counted at right edge, one at a time.

Page 10: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Today- 1. optical transmission of information- optical fiber network.(all long distance telephone and computer communication) 2. Optical storage of information --CD and DVDs. (if time??)

See how bunch of physics already covered is put to usein a new way. Light, lasers, reflection and bending of light,focusing light, detection.

Main advantages of using light for long distancecommunication-- already apparent in early discussion.H. W. Longfellow

Page 11: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Paul Revere's Ride

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Listen my children and you shall hearOf the midnight ride of Paul Revere,On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;Hardly a man is now aliveWho remembers that famous day and year. He said to his friend, "If the British marchBy land or sea from the town to-night,Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry archOf the North Church tower as a signal light,--One if by land, and two if by sea;And I on the opposite shore will be,Ready to ride and spread the alarmThrough every Middlesex village and farm,For the country folk to be up and to arm."

next verses talk about moon, night wind, … i. e. noise that could obscure signals

Page 12: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

alternatives? (shows benefits of light used today)-1) “yell really loud at me”-- Does rhyme with “sea”. but sound not carry as far as light. 2) “Row over and tell me”- still rhymes, but slow. Light much faster.

Uses another trick of modern optical communication- digital information. Flash a light. Just seeing it tells Paul his friend is there to send signal.All information contained in second pulse of light. If on = by sea, if off, no light= by land. “binary digital signal”- two choices (on/off) . One bit of information. Information “digital”.

Big Advantage-Very distinct and unambiguous. on or off -- can distinguish even if fog, moonlight, etc. Now days- information coded as series of on and offs that give numbers. Signal is insulated from presence of noise. (same as hiss on tape recorder, etc.)

Page 13: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Why use light ?1. light- fast. Transmit signals rapidly.2. Can go long way without being absorbed. (under special conditions!)

Page 14: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Principles behind design of optical communication system

Want to send telephone signals from Boulder to Ft. Collins.Put sound information into light pulses. (lots of lantern flashes, a al Paul). 1. What are some problems withsending this way? (Write down 3 per group.)Then be prepared to offer ways to get around the problems.

1. need lots of light flashes in a hurry. Need good wayto turn light on and off very fast and detect pulses.2. Light spreads out all over the place, not much gets toFt. Collins. Also, clouds and dust block it.3. Want to send many conversations, no way to separateone light from another .4. not be able to see light from location. 5. ….

Page 15: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Solutions:1. confine light to pipe, send it right where want, keeps clouds, dust etc. out, keeps light from spreading out (laser).

Send light pulses down thin glass optical fibers.(“light pipes”) Light does not spread out, can be directed to exactly right place, can have multiple fibers to separateconversations, no clouds, etc.

Page 16: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Demo of plastic rod and laser beam- behavior of lightinside rod.

How to make light stay inside fiber/pipe?

a. it doesn’t. It all leaks out but hard to see because so spread out.b. Most reflects off the walls because they are covered with mirror-like reflective surface.c. Only the light that hits wall at too steep an angle reflects.

ans. c.

Page 17: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Light travels more slowly in material with larger index of refraction n. Causes it to bend more when go from higher to lower n.

Light Beam

AIR, N=1 GLASS, N=1.5AIR, N=1

Small Reflection

Page 18: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

How does amount bent depend on angle of hitting wall?If hits at steeper angle bends a. more, b. same, c. less

AIR, N=1 GLASS, N=1.5

AIR, N=1

a b

c

ans. a. Bends more. Like car. Front right tire in air first, goes faster,remember n=c/v, so smaller n, means travels faster. Turns car more toward top.

before

after(steeper)

Page 19: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

What if hit at even steeper angle?

AIR, N=1 GLASS, N=1.5

AIR, N=1

Bends so much never even leaves glass! “Total internal reflection”Happens at certain angle for every interface.when angle a > sin-1(nbig/nlittle), then total reflection. Absolutely everythingstays inside, no light leaves!Makes it possible to pipe light beam around like water!! Demos of optical fibers.

a

Page 20: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Demo of plastic rod and laser beam- what will happen if dip into mineral oil?

Send light through plexiglass rod. If dip rod in mineral oil what will happen to light coming through?a. will get dimmer, b. will stay same, c. will get brighter

n = 1.4

nplastic = 1.45

ans. a. will get dimmer. now no change in n from inside to out. no bend and no reflection. key is change in n!

Page 21: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

optical fiber

about the same diameter as a thick hair. Purity is about 1 wrong atom per billion glass atoms. Light goes about 20 miles, before half light absorbed!! Boost back up about every 50 miles.Copper wire boost electrical signal every ½ mile. Optical fibers under ocean, all over land. Send information at rate of 10 billion bits / seconds, copper wire transmits about 1/100 the speed.

laser light

high n

low n

Page 22: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

How to get light into tiny fiber?Lens to focus laser light.

why laser light rather than ordinary light?Laser can be focused into much smaller spot. 1. Can get much larger fraction of laser light into tiny fiber.Smaller fiber means cheaper, more flexible.

Page 23: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Want to make absorption of light in fiber as small aspossible.How to do it?

Write down important physics issues for absorption of light. How to build low absorption fiber.

a. make fiber only out of atoms that have excitation energiesmatching the wavelength of light.b. make fiber only out of atoms that have excitation energiesas far as possible from that of the wavelength of light.c. use wide mixture of different kinds of atomsd. use range of different colors of light.

Page 24: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Want to make absorption of light in fiber as small aspossible.How to do it?

b. make fiber only out of atoms that have excitation energiesas far as possible from that of the wavelength of light.Make fiber as pure as possible, pick atoms and wavelengthsto have excitation energies as far as possible from photonenergy. (near IR, super incredibly pure silicon)

Page 25: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Key things making optical fiber communication possible.1. Lasers so could get enough light focused into skinny little fiber.2. fast light detectors- photodiodes like in digital cameras.3. Fibers with small enough absorption. Physics you already know-- absorption of light by atoms. a. ones with energy levels near energy of light- bad impurities, workincredibly hard at removing them. Ultrapure!! b. ones like glass with energy levels way up in ultraviolet like in air. still some scattering- same as why sky is blue. So less loss in infrared, so light sent down fibers is near infrared where loss is lowest.

To send voice telephone call takes 64,000 bits/sec. Range of sound wavesfrom 400 Hz to 3400 Hz. (56 K modem = 56,000 bits/sec)Can send 156,000 phone calls at the same time down one optical fiber!

transmission rate of 10 Gbits/s (=10 billion bits/s)

Page 26: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

2. Storage of information optically. Store all these digital numbers as tiny littlerough spots on CD or DVD. Light reflection-on, no reflect-off. Have to focus thelight down into tiny little spot. Determines information density.

Really extensive discussion of DVD and CD technology at how things work:http://www.howstuffworks.com/

Page 27: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

CD and DVD construction: basically the same, but DVDs smaller pits, shorter wavelength light, can have two sides and two reflecting layers, data compression.

Information stored as pits in a surface,light reflects off pits.

The amount of light that reaches a detector depends on whether a pit is hit or not. Information is stored digitally.

Page 28: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Picture of CD/DVD Player

Page 29: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Digital to Analog conversion

Page 30: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Digital to Analog conversion

Page 31: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Digital to Analog conversion

Page 32: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Digital to Analog conversion

Page 33: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Digital to Analog conversion

Page 34: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

DVD vs CD1. smaller pits, shorter wavelength.2. two sided option3. two layer option.- how to pick out which layer looking at?change focus of laser beam- move lens (little bit). Top layertransmits half. On to off of top or bottom, bigger effect than ½.

secondpass

Page 35: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM)

Page 36: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Light travels more slowly in material with larger index of refraction n. Causes it to bend more when go from higher to lower n.

Light Beam

AIR, N=1 GLASS, N=1.5AIR, N=1

In a rectangular slab, light ray straightens out again when it comes back out!

Small Reflection

If n is 1.5 for all colors, which travels through the glass most rapidly?a. red, b. blue, c. green, d. they all go at 3 x 10^8 m/s, e. they allgo at 2 x 10^8 m/s.

e. The speed of light is given by n=c/v, or v= c/n. c = 3 x 10^8 m/s.so if n =1.5 for all colors, v = 3/1.5 x 10^8 m/s. In most materials different colorstravel at very slightly different speeds, so they bend differently. That is whya prism works. n = 1.536 for red, 1.555 for blue. Difference of 1%. Which faster?

Page 37: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

So what about storage of sound? 1) demo of sound on scope with microphone and storage scope.

Original phonograph- groove on tin foil went up and down like sound.similar in record player.

time

airpressure

run needle over surface to reproduce sound.Can’t follow perfectly,surface scrapes away, extrahiss from scraping, …

“analogue” storage of information

surface of recordneedle

Page 38: A pixel of the CCD (Charged-coupled Device) Array Energy  ------------------ ++++++++++++++ Thin Insulator Thin Conductor P-Type semiconductor N-Type.

Digital storage. Every 1/44,100 sec, measure pressure, store as binarynumber. As long as can tell difference between 1 (on) and 0 (off)sound will be perfectly reproduced even if noise!

sound on scope. Make signal small, see signal/noise ratio.


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