photodarlingtons
Photodarlingtons are light-sensitive devices that use a Darlington transistor pair to amplify photocurrent. In a photodarlington arrangement, a photodetector element such as a photodiode or photosensitive transistor feeds the base of a first transistor, whose amplified output drives a second transistor in a Darlington configuration. This yields a very high current gain, allowing small amounts of incident light to produce relatively large output signals. Photodarlingtons are encountered as discrete components and as the output stage in certain optocouplers and photodetector modules.
Construction and operation are centered on converting light into an electrical signal with gain. The photodetector
Key characteristics include high current gain, relatively simple interfacing to logic or microcontroller inputs, and sensitivity
Applications for photodarlingtons include optocouplers with high-gain outputs, low-light sensing in automation and instrumentation, and detectors