Thanks a lot for your answers.
First, sorry, that is something I didn't mention but the photodiode will be reverse biased (high frequency response). The Vbias in the schematic will be 5 V.
Audioguru I don't get why you say the photo-diode is not a current source when reverse-biased.
With the photodiode is reverse-biased, there won't be any current if there is no light (or just leak/dark current, to be precise). Then when an optical signal illuminates the PD it will be absorbed, generating electron-hole pairs that will be swept/drifted by the applied reverse voltage generating then the so-called photocurrent, that's the reason I'm talking about equivalent current source. If the optical signal has an AC amplitude modulation on top of a constant DC value, then we will have an equivalent current source with both DC photocurrent and also an AC component. That's my situation.
The equivalent model can be seen in IEEE article for example **broken link removed**
I know the model, but my question is how to simulate it / implement it using a voltage source (instead of having an optical signal and a photodiode). In the PCB I will have the OpAmp-based TIA + whatever represents faithfully the photodiode when a voltage source is used. A capacitor to ground will be present, for sure, but I'm having problems trying to figure out what about the series/parallel resistors at the input.
I hope I explained me correctly this time.
Cheers