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Indium(III) antimonide
Indium(III) antimonide
Other names Indium antimonide
Identifiers
CAS number 1312-41-0 Yes check.svgY
Properties
Molecular formula InSb
Molar mass 236.578 g/mol
Appearance dark grey silvery metal pieces
Density 5.775 g/cm3
Melting point

527 °C[1]

Solubility in water insoluble
Band gap 0.17 eV
Electron mobility 77000 cm2/(V*s) (300 K)
Thermal conductivity 0.18 W/(cm*K) (300 K)
Refractive index (nD) 4.0
Structure
Crystal structure Zincblende
Space group T2d-F-43m
Coordination
geometry
Tetrahedral
Hazards
R-phrases R20 R22
S-phrases (S2) S20/21 S22 S45
 Yes check.svgY (what is this?)  (verify)
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa)
Infobox references

Indium antimonide is a crystalline compound made from the elements indium and antimony. It is a narrow gap semiconductor material from the III-V group used in infrared detectors, including thermal imaging cameras, FLIR systems, infrared homing missile guidance systems, and in infrared astronomy. The indium antimonide detectors are sensitive between 1-5 µm wavelengths. Indium antimonide was a very common detector in the old, single-detector mechanically scanned thermal imaging systems. Another application is as terahertz radiation source as it is a strong Photo-dember emitter.

Contents

[edit] History

InSb crystals have been grown by slow cooling from liquid melt at least since 1954 [2].

[edit] Physical properties

Indium antimonide

InSb has the appearance of dark grey silvery metal pieces or powder with vitreous lustre. When subjected to temperatures over 500 °C, it melts and decomposes, liberating antimony and antimony oxide vapors.

InSb is a narrow gap semiconductor with an energy band gap of 0.17 eV at 300 K and 0.23 eV at 80 K . The crystal structure is zincblende with a 0.648 nm lattice constant [1].

The undoped semiconductor possesses the largest ambient temperature electron mobility (78000 cm2/(V*s) [3], electron velocity, and ballistic length (up to 0.7 μm at 300 K) [1] of any known semiconductor except possibly for carbon nanotubes.

Indium antimonide photodiode detectors are photovoltaic, generating electric current when subjected to infrared radiation. InSb has high quantum efficiency (80-90%) [4]. Its drawback is a high instability over time; the detector characteristics tend to drift over time, and between cooldowns, requiring periodic recalibrations, increasing the complexity of the imaging system. Due to their instability, InSb detectors are rarely used in metrology applications. This added complexity is worthwhile where extreme sensitivity is required, e.g. in long-range military thermal imaging systems. InSb detectors also require cooling, as they have to operate at cryogenic temperatures (typically 80 K). However, large arrays (up to 1024x1024 pixels) are available. [5] HgCdTe and PtSi are materials with similar use.

A layer of indium antimonide sandwiched between layers of aluminium indium antimonide can act as a quantum well. This approach is studied in order to construct very fast transistors. [6] Bipolar transistors operating at frequencies up to 85 GHz were constructed from indium antimonide in the late 1990s. Field effect transistors operating at over 200 GHz have been reported more recently (Intel/QinetiQ). Some models suggest terahertz frequencies are achievable with this material. Indium antimonide semiconductors are also capable of operating with voltages under 0.5 V, reducing their power requirements.

[edit] Growth Methods

InSb can be grown by solidifying a melt from the liquid state, or epitaxially by liquid phase epitaxy, hot wall epitaxy or molecular beam epitaxy. It can also be grown from organometallic compounds by MOVPE.

[edit] Device Applications

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Properties of Indium Antimonide (InSb)
  2. ^ Avery, D G (1954). "Optical and Photo-Electrical Properties of Indium Antimonide". Proceedings of the Physical Society Section B 67: 761. doi:10.1088/0370-1301/67/10/304. 
  3. ^ Rode, D. L. (1971). "Electron Transport in InSb, InAs, and InP". Physical Review B 3: 3287. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.3.3287. 
  4. ^ Avery, D G (1957). "New infra-red detectors using indium antimonide". Journal of Scientific Instruments 34: 394. doi:10.1088/0950-7671/34/10/305. 
  5. ^ M. G. Beckett "High Resolution Infrared Imaging", PhD thesis, Cambridge University (1995) Chapter 3: Camera
  6. ^ 'Quantum well' transistor promises lean computing (accessdate=April 2009)

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