HO12 Lecture11 Review
HO12 Lecture11 Review
HO12 Lecture11 Review
EE362A
Fall 2015
*Figures that are not annotated with reference are from the education package distributed by the distributor of Neamen textbook.
Today’s Lecture
– pn junction diode
• Forward/reverse bias
• High current injection / breakdown / recombination
• Transient
– BJT
• Excess minority carriers at four operating modes
• Current gain factors
• Nonideal factors
• Transients
(2) eφ Fn = EFi − EF in n
eφ Fp = EFi − EF in p
(3) " Nd %
EF − EFi = kT ln $ '
# ni &
" Na %
EFi − EF = kT ln $ '
# ni &
Remember ….
!
dE(x) ρ (x) dφ (x) !
= = − E(x)
dx ε dx
differentiate differentiate
Charge E-field Potential
!
ρ (x) E(x) φ (x)
integrate integrate
! ρ (x) !
E(x) = ∫ dx φ (x) = − ∫ E(x)dx
ε
φ (x)
differentiate
integrate
Positive potential is
downwards by definition
H. J. Lee | EE | KAIST EE362A | Fall 2015 7
PN under Reverse Bias (2)
Ç√
1/2
' 2ε (Vbi +VR ) ! N + N $*
W = )) # d a
&,,
( e " N d N a %+
! −2(Vbi +VR )
E(x)max =
W
Reverse-biased
current increases
rapidly!
10
+dQ'
W(VR)
W(VR+dVR)
H. J. Lee | EE | KAIST EE362A | Fall 2015 11
PN under Reverse Bias (6)
+dQ'
ε
C' =
W (VR )
−dQ' VR
Na Nd
xn = W xp = W
Nd + Na Nd + Na
! −2(Vbi −Va )
E(x)max = decreased!
W
Na N d nno pn
n po Total minority carrier
np concentrations
δ pn = pn − pn0
δ n p = n p − n p0
“Excess” minority carrier
p po concentrations
pno
2 ni2
ni
pno ≈
n po ≈ Nd
Na
Minority carrier
electron in the p region
Logarithmic Scale
" −eVbi %
n po = nno exp $ '
# kT &
§ Tells you how much the minority e- concentration in the p region
(np0) is small compared to the majority e- concentration in the n
region (nno)
n po
nno
δ pn = pn − pno
§ What will happen to the injected minority carriers?
Excess!
– Governed by ambipolar transport (Chapter 6.3)
– Function of time and spatial coordinates
∂2 (δ pn ) ∂(δ pn ) δ pn ∂(δ pn )
In n region Dp 2
− µ p E + G − = G: generation
∂x ∂x τ po ∂t
diffusion drift recombination
– Assumption: !
E=0
in the neutral n region (x > xn)
G=0
Steady State: ∂(δ pn )
=0
∂t
δ pn = pn − pno
§ What will happen to the injected minority carriers?
Excess!
∂2 (δ pn ) ∂(δ pn ) δ pn ∂(δ pn )
In n region Dp 2
− µ p E + G − =
∂x ∂x τ po ∂t
diffusion drift recombination
– Assumption: !
E=0
in the neutral n region (x > xn)
G=0
∂(δ pn )
Steady State: =0
∂t
∂2 (δ pn ) δ pn ∂2 (δ pn ) δ pn
2
− =0 L p2 = Dpτ po (x > xn ) 2
− 2 =0
∂x Dpτ po ∂x Lp
∂2 (δ n p ) δ n p Ln2 = Dnτ no (x < −x p ) ∂2 (δ n p ) δ n p
2
− =0 2
− 2 =0
∂x Dnτ no ∂x Ln
4 2
pno (x → +∞)
n po (x → −∞)
Wp Wn
Wp >> L p
“long pn junction”
Wn >> Ln
∂2 (δ pn ) δ pn ∂2 (δ n p ) δ n p
2
− 2 =0 2
− 2 =0
∂x Lp ∂x Ln
( ! eVa $ + !x −x$
δ pn (x) = pno *exp # & −1- exp ## n &&, (x ≥ xn )
) " kT % , " Lp %
( ! eVa $ + ! xp + x $
δ n p (x) = n po *exp # & −1- exp # &, (x ≤ x p )
) " kT % , " Ln %
( ! eVa $ + !x −x$
δ pn (x) = pno *exp # & −1- exp ## n &&, (x ≥ xn )
) " kT % , " Lp %
( ! eVa $ + ! xp + x $
δ n p (x) = n po *exp # & −1- exp # &, (x ≤ x p )
) " kT % , " Ln %
exponentially
§ Assumptions:
1) The total current in the junction is the sum of the individual e- and h+
currents which are constant through the depletion region
2) Since the e- and h+ currents are continuous, currents in the depletion
region are the same with the diffusion currents at the depletion region
edges
(1)+(2)
J total = J h+ + J e− at any x
(1)
= J p + Jn
(2) = J p (xn ) + J n (−x p )
The n gradient
produces diffusion
current
§ Similarly,
" eD p eD n %" ( eV + %
J = J p (xn ) + J n (−x p ) = $ p no + n po '$exp * a - −1'
$# L p Ln '&# ) kT , &
( ! eVa $ +
J = Js *exp # & −1-
) " kT % ,
“Ideal-Diode Equation”
E >B>C
+ -
§ “We are dealing with only minority carriers” 1) Forward active
xE is small
pE (x ' = xE ) = pE 0
2) Cutoff
3) Saturation
4) Inverse Active
=γ ⋅ αT ⋅ δ
α = γ ⋅ αT ⋅ δ
"γ : JPE is not part of the collector current
$
$
$αT : Any recombination of excess minority electrons in Base. We
# want no recombination
$
$δ : The recombination in the forward-biased B-E junction (JR)
$ JR contributes to the E current, but not to current
%
! J $! J $! J + J $
nE nC nE pE
α = ## &&# &# & !γ : “Emitter Injection Efficiency”
J
" nE + J J J
pE % " nE % " nE + J + J PE % JPE is not part of the collector
R
#
= γ ⋅ αT ⋅ δ # current
#
#
#αT : “Base Transport Factor”
" Any recombination of excess
# minority electrons in base.
# à We want no recombination
#
#δ : “Recombination Factor”
#$ The recombination in the
forward-biased B-E junction
(JR)
JR contributes to the E
current, but not to C current
increase in currents!
§ Consequence:
early voltage
(100~300V)
dI C IC 1
= g0 = =
dVCE VCE +VA r0 output resistance
1
I C = g0 (VCE +VA ) = (VCE +VA )
r0
originally IC should be
nothing to do with VCE
§ For example:
VCB : 2V →10V à 8% change of WB
Emitter Base
§ β as a function of IC
Higher VBE
lower VBE
remember from pn
junction
! VBE $
p p (0)n p (0) = p p0 n p0 exp # & Still applies at high injection
V
" T %
" VBE %
n p (0) ≈ n p0 exp $ '
2V
# T&
For the same
increase in VBE, less
The same as the diode case change in IC
Saturation
Cutoff Cutoff
§ What happens to IC over time (transient)?
tr
0 WB
Minority same still same
cutoff carrier slope! discharging
slope, but
injection little drop in
H. J. Lee | EE | KAIST EE362A | Fall 2015 C 47