Cadmium zinc telluride, (CdZnTe) or CZT, is (as the name indicates) a compound of cadmium, zinc and tellurium or more strictly speaking, an alloy of cadmium telluride and zinc telluride. A wide, direct bandgap semiconductor, it is used in a variety of applications, including radiation detectors, photorefractive gratings, electro-optic modulators and terahertz generation and detection.
Radiation detectors using CZT can operate at room temperature, unlike some other materials (particularly germanium) which require liquid nitrogen cooling. CZT can be formed into different shapes for different radiation-detecting applications. It has a high electro-optic coefficient and transparency in the mid-infrared region, making it a good modulator material for infrared lasers. The same properties make it useful for detection of terahertz waves.
An additional use is as a substrate material for the epitaxial growth of mercury cadmium telluride (HgCdTe), an infrared detector material. Cd0.96Zn0.04Te is almost perfectly lattice matched to LWIR HgCdTe (80% Hg, 20% Cd).
Cadmium zinc telluride is highly toxic to humans. It should not be ingested, nor its dust inhaled, and it should not be handled without appropriate gloves. Please refer to materials safety data sheets for details.
Currently the only American company which polishes CdZnTe to epitaxial standards for molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth is located in Bolingbrook, Illinois.
Cadmium compounds | Zinc compounds | Tellurides | Semiconductor materials | Nonlinear optical materials | Terahertz technology
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