BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY
Search BYU
Contact
|
Help
ECEn Home
Cleanroom Home
Semiconductor Properties
Optical Absorption Calculator
Navigation Menu
Cleanroom Home
Photonics Home
Semiconductor Properties...
All Semiconductor Properties
Coefficients of Thermal Expansion
Color Chart
Crystal Planes
Diffusion Profile Calculator/Graph
Direct Bandgap Energy Calculator
Everything Wafers
Impact Ionization Coefficients and Gain Calculator
Metal-Semiconductor Barrier Calculator
MOSFET Current Calculator
Ohmic and Schottky Contacts
Optical Absorption Coefficient Calculator
Physical Constants
PN Junction Animation
PN Junction Properties Calculator
Resistivities for several materials
Resistivity & Mobility Calculator/Graph
Schottky Contact Animation
Thermal Properties of Pure Metals
Microfabrication Processes...
All Microfabrication Processes
Chemical Etching
Chemistry Recipe Calculators
Diffusion Profile Calculator/Graph
Ion Implantation
Lithography Materials (Photoresists, adhesion, developer)
Lithography
N-MOS Transistor Tutorial
Oxide Growth
PECVD Deposition
Photomasks
PVD Metal Deposition
RIE Etching
Substrate Cleaning
Thin Film Evaporation Reference
Optical References...
All Optical References
ABCD Matrix Tutorial
Anti-Reflection Coating Thickness Calculator
ARROW Waveguide Layer Thickness Calculator
Color Chart
Complex Index of Refraction Look-up Utility
Diffraction Grating Calculator
FBG Holography
Fiber Bragg Grating Calculator
Fiber Optic Connectors
Fiber Optic Standards
Fiber Parameter Calculator
Photonics Home
Power Reflection Calculator
Tabulated Optical Constants
Thin Lens Tutorial
Wavelength to Frequency Conversion Chart
Cleanroom Equipment...
All Equipment
Equipment Map
Aligner (Karl Suss Mask MA150)
Dicing Saw (Disco)
E-Beam Evaporator (Denton)
Ellipsometer
Filmetrics F20
Four Point Probe
Hot Pot (Modutek)
HP 4145
HP 4156A
ICP Etcher (STS)
Microscope (Leica)
Nanospec
Ovens (for Dehydration)
Pattern Generator (Electromask)
PE 2 Etcher (Planar Etcher II)
PECVD 1
PECVD 2
Plasma Etcher (Branson)
Prism Coupler (Metricon)
Probe Stations
Profilometer
RIE (Anelva)
RTA
Spinner (Headway)
Spinner (Laurell)
Spinner (Solitec)
Sputtering System (Denton)
Thermal Evaporator
Tube Furnaces
VAC Glovebox
Vacuum Oven
UH114
CMP System
Polisher (Ultra-pol)
Grinder
ICP Etcher (Trion )
Critical Point Dryer
Safety and Protocol...
All Safety and Protocol
Acid Safety
Emergency Contact
Fire Safety
First Aid
Glove Chemical Resistance
Gowning
HF Safety (coming soon)
Housekeeping and Cleanroom Etiquette
MSDS
NFPA Diamond
Personal Protective Equipment
Safety Procedures
Safety Tutorials
Solvent Safety
User Resources...
Contact Us
Cleanroom Access
Scheduler
Equipment Maintenance
Research Students
SEM images
Projects List
BYU Exclusives
External Links...
Equipment Manufactures
Purchasing Wafers
Processing Foundries
Industry Cleanrooms
Ion Implantation Services
MEMs
Nanotechnology
Semiconductor
University Research Labs
Miscellaneous Links
[
see all...
]
Optical Absorption Coefficient Calculator
Semiconductor Type:
Silicon (0.0006 - 4 μm)
GaAs (0.1879 - 2.2540 μm)
InP (0.1968 - 2.2540 μm)
Ge (0.1378 - 1.937 μm)
Enter Wavelength:
(μm)
Absorption coefficient (α)
(cm
-1
)
Actual Wavelength used for the calculation
(μm)
Warnings:
Expand All
Compress All
How does this work?
This calculator could be described as a simple lookup table. The entered wavelength is used to iterate through an array to find the closest wavelength that has a measured kappa value. That location is then used for a corresponding absorption array which was made by using this
equation
. I do recognize that there are some fairly glaring contradictions when the increasing wavelengths switch from different reported research.>
The
Handbook of Optical Constants of Solids
gathers data from different papers to list the kappa values along with the wavelengths; consistency is not maintained. I show you the graph found in the handbook along with the excel plots of the absorption coefficients that my arrays are based on so the user can quickly see if the calculated value makes sense.
The Silicon, Gallium Arsenide, and Indium Phosphide kappa values come from a linear interpolation of data found in
Handbook of Optical Constants of Solids
that is found
here
. However, Geranium is pulled straight from the
Handbook of Optical Constants of Solids
and is why there are several "jumps" in the excel plot as different reported research doesn't match up. For this reason the "Warning" display is provided to inform you when you have fallen into this questionable range. The Excel graph below shows the inconsistencies of Geranium while the other graph shows the general flow of the constants.
References:
Handbook of Optical Constants of Solids
, edited by Edward D. Palik, (1985), Academic Press, NY.
Maintained by
ECEn Dept. Web Team
.
Copyright © 1994-2004. Brigham Young University. All Rights Reserved.