eigenroot
Junior Member level 3
I am trying to measure the long tail of a transient current decay of a photodiode which is excited by a pulsed laser. The transient from the photodiode is fed into a current amplifier and the amplified current is measured by an oscilloscope with 50ohm input impedance. See the circuit here View attachment circuit.pdf
My goal is to amplify the long tail of the photocurrent as much as possible, and I am not very interested in the initial part of the decay (say, from the peak to its 1%, spanning about 10us from the falling edge ). But this initial part limits the amplifer gain I can use because if I make the gain too large it either saturates the amplifier or overloads the oscilloscope. Right now I insert an analog switch between the photodiode and the amplifier, and turn on the analog swith with certain amount of delay (e.g., 10us) from the pulse falling edge, so that only the current 10us after the falling edge is passed to the amplifier. The problem is there is always charge injection effect in analog switch in real practice. Although the charge injection of the switch I use (ADG701) is only a few pC, I can still see a huge peak induced by the switch turn-on and turn-off in oscilloscope.
How can I get rid of the charge injection in this case? It is important since any injected charge will affect the weak and long-tail current. Or, is there a better way to circumvent the gain limit caused by the inital part of transient decay? Any thought is greatly appreciated!
My goal is to amplify the long tail of the photocurrent as much as possible, and I am not very interested in the initial part of the decay (say, from the peak to its 1%, spanning about 10us from the falling edge ). But this initial part limits the amplifer gain I can use because if I make the gain too large it either saturates the amplifier or overloads the oscilloscope. Right now I insert an analog switch between the photodiode and the amplifier, and turn on the analog swith with certain amount of delay (e.g., 10us) from the pulse falling edge, so that only the current 10us after the falling edge is passed to the amplifier. The problem is there is always charge injection effect in analog switch in real practice. Although the charge injection of the switch I use (ADG701) is only a few pC, I can still see a huge peak induced by the switch turn-on and turn-off in oscilloscope.
How can I get rid of the charge injection in this case? It is important since any injected charge will affect the weak and long-tail current. Or, is there a better way to circumvent the gain limit caused by the inital part of transient decay? Any thought is greatly appreciated!
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