Unit-2 Junction Diode
Unit-2 Junction Diode
Unit-2 Junction Diode
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Valence Electrons
Electrons are distributed in various shells
at different distances from nucleus
Electron energy increases as shell radius
increases.
Electrons in the outermost shell are called
valence electrons
Elements in the period table are grouped
according to the number of valence
electrons
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Valence Electrons
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Elemental/Compound
Semiconductor
Silicon (Si) and Germanium (Ge) are in
group IV, and are elemental
semiconductors
Galium arsenide (GaAs) is a goup III-V
compound semiconductor
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Silicon Crystal
At 0K, each electron is in its lowest
possible energy state, and each covalent
bounding position is filled.
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Silicon Atom Diagram at 0K
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Intrinsic Silicon
If the temperature increases, the
valence electrons will gain some thermal
energy, and breaks free from the covalent
bond It leaves a positively charged hole
In order to break from the covalent
bond, a valence electron must gain a
minimun energy Eg: Bandgap energy
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Silicon Atom Diagram at Ambiant
Temp
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Insulators/Conductors
Materials that have large bandgap
energies (in the range of 3 to 6 electron-
volts (eV)) are insulators, because at
room temperature, essentially no free
electron exists in the material
Materials that contain very large number of
free electrons at room temperature are
conductors
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Semiconductors
In a semiconductor, the bandgap
energy is in the order of 1 eV. The net flow
of free electrons causes a current.
In a semiconductor, two types of
charged particles contribute to the current:
the negatively charged electrons and the
positively charged holes
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Movement of Holes Movement of
Holes
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Semiconductor Constants
The concentration of electrons and
holes directly influence the magnitde
of the current
In an intrinsic semiconductor (a single
crystal semiconductor) the densities
of holes and electrons are equal.
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ni: intrinsic carrier concentration for free
electrons (same for holes)
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Semiconductor Constants
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Extrinsic Semiconductor / Doping
The electron or hole concentration can be
greatly increased by adding controlled
amounts of certain impurities
For silicon, it is desirable to use impurities
from the group III and V.
An N-type semiconductor can be created
by adding phosphorus or arsenic
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Extrinsic Semiconductor / Doping
The phosphorus (group V) atom is called
donor impurity because it donates an
electron that is free to move
The boron (group III) has accepted a
valence electron (or donated a hole), it is
therefore called acceptor impurity
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N-Type Semiconductor
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P-Type Semiconductor
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Introduction to Semiconductor Devices
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p-n junction formation
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Diffusion
A substance, the purple dots, in Now that the gates have been
solution. A membrane prevents opened, the random movements of
movement of the water and the the molecules have caused,
overtime, the number of molecules
molecules from crossing from
to be equal on the two sides of the
one side of the beaker to the
barrier.
other.
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Diffusion
Being free particles, electrons start diffusing from n-type material into p-material
Being free particles, holes, too, start diffusing from p-type material into n-material
Have they been NEUTRAL particles, eventually all the free electrons
and holes had uniformly distributed over the entire compound crystal.
However, every electrons transfers a negative charge (-q) onto the p-
side and also leaves an uncompensated (+q) charge of the donor on the
n-side.
Every hole creates one positive charge (q) on the n-side and (-q) on the
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p-side
p- n junction formation
What happens if n- and p-type materials are in close contact?
p-type n-type
Electrons and holes remain staying close to the p-n junction because
negative and positive charges attract each other.
Negative charge stops electrons from further diffusion
The diffusion forms a dipole charge layer at the p-n junction interface.
p-type n-type
The polarity shown, attracts holes to the left and electrons to the right.
According to the current continuity law, the current can only flow if all
the charged particles move forming a closed loop
However, there are very few holes in n-type material and there are
very few electrons in the p-type material.
There are very few carriers available to support the current through the
junction plane
For the voltage polarity shown, the current is nearly zero
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p- n junction current voltage characteristics
What happens if voltage of opposite polarity is applied to a p-n junction?
p-type n-type
The polarity shown, attracts electrons to the left and holes to the right.
There are plenty of electrons in the n-type material and plenty of holes in
the p-type material.
There are a lot of carriers available to cross the junction.
When the voltage exceeds the built-in voltage, the current can flow through
the p-n junction - by FaaDoOEngineers.com
Diode current voltage (I-V) characteristics
Semiconductor diode consists of a p-n junction with two
contacts attached to the p- and n- sides
p n
V 0
qV
I I S exp 1
kT
IS is usually a very small current, IS 10-17 10-13 A
When the voltage V is negative (reverse polarity) the exponential term -1;
The diode current is IS ( very small).
When the voltage V is positive (forward polarity) the exponential term
increases rapidly with V and the- bycurrent
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is high.
Graphing the I-V characteristics of electronic components.
The I-V plot represents is the dependence of the current I through
the component on the voltage V across it.
1
Resistor V I R; I V
R
I = V / R;
R = V/I
R
a DI tg(a) = 1/R
DV
V
The I-V
- bycharacteristic of the resistor
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The I-V characteristic of the diode
qV
I I S exp 1
kT
IS
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The experimental I-V characteristic of a Si diode
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p- n diode circuit notation
qV
When plus is applied to the p-side, I I S exp 1
kT
the current is high. This voltage
polarity is called FORWARD. IS
Electrons drift into p-material and find plenty of holes there. They
RECOMBINE by filling up the empty positions.
Holes drift into n-material and find plenty of electrons there. They also
RECOMBINE by filling up the empty positions.
p-type n-type
When the light illuminates the p-n junction, the photons energy RELEASES free
electrons and holes.
They are referred to as PHOTO-ELECTRONS and PHOTO-HOLES
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WHAT IS TUNNELING
Classically, carrier must have energy at least
equal to potential-barrier height to cross the
junction .
But according to Quantum mechanics there is
finite probability that it can penetrate through the
barrier for a thin width.
This phenomenon is
called tunneling and
hence the Esaki Diode
is know as
Tunnel Diode. - by FaaDoOEngineers.com
CHARACTERISTIC OF TUNNEL DIODE
Ip
Forward Current
Vp:- Peak Voltage - Ve Resistance Region
Reverse Current Vp Vv Vf
Reverse
voltage Forward Voltage
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ENERGY BAND DIAGRAM
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AT ZERO BIAS
Simplified energy-band diagram and I-V characteristics of the tunnel diode at zero bias.
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AT SMALL FORWARD VOLTAGE
Simplified energy-band diagram and I-V characteristics of the tunnel diode at a slight forward bias.
Simplified energy-band diagraam and I-V characteristics of the tunnel diode at a forward bias
producing maximum tunneling current.
Simplified energy-band diagram and I-V characteristics of the tunnel diode at a higher forward
bias producing less tunneling current.
Simplified energy-band diagram and I-V characteristics of the tunnel diode at a forward bias
for which the diffusion current dominates.
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Zener Diode
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48
Zener Region
DC or Static Resistance
AC or Dynamic Resistance
Average AC Resistance
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50
DC or Static Resistance
(1.1)
RD = VD/ID
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51
Example : DC or Static Resistance refer Figure 1.1
2m 0 0 2m 0.5 250
0 -10 -2 -10 5M
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53
AC or Dynamic Resistance
rd = VD/ ID (1.2)
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54
Average AC Resistance
Vd
r av (point to point)
Id