Carrier Action: Motion, Recombination and Generation. What Happens We Figure Out How Many Electrons and Holes Are in The Semiconductor?
Carrier Action: Motion, Recombination and Generation. What Happens We Figure Out How Many Electrons and Holes Are in The Semiconductor?
Carrier Action: Motion, Recombination and Generation. What Happens We Figure Out How Many Electrons and Holes Are in The Semiconductor?
and Generation.
1
Carrier Motion I
Described by 2 concepts:
• Conductivity: s
(or resistivity: r = 1/s)
• Mobility: m
Zero Field movement:
Electrons are
Random – over all e-
scattered by
Thermal – Energy impurities,
Distribution. defects etc.
Motion
4
Currents
“Current density” (J) is just the amount of
charge passing through a unit area per unit
time.
Jx = (-q)(n0)<vx> in C/(s m2) or A/m2
= +(qn0mn)Ex for e-’s acting alone.
= sn Ex (defining e- conductivity)
If both electrons and holes are present:
J = q(no mn po m p ) E = sE = E
r
5
Current, Resistance
How do we find:
• current (I)? We integrate J.
I= J dydz
y = 0 to w
z = 0 to t
x
• resistance (R)? t L
L V
r ( x ) dx rL
R = w( x ) t ( x ) = wt
= s1 wtL w
8
What does Ex do to our Energy Band Diagram?
9
Energy Band Diagrams in electric fields
EC is the lower edge for potential energy (the
energy required to break an electron out of a
bonding state.)
Everything above EC is KE then.
PE always has to have a
Eelectron
reference! We’ll choose e-
KE
one arbitrarily for the
EC = PE
moment. (EREF = Constant) Eg
EV = PE
Then PE = EC-EREF PE
KE
h+
We also know: PE=-qV
EREF
10
Energy Band Diagrams in electric fields II
Electric
fields and voltages are related by:
E = -V (or in 1-D E=-dV/dx)
• So: PE = EC-EREF = -qV or V = -(EC-EREF)/q
• Ex = -dV/dx = -d/dx{-(EC-EREF)/q} or
Ex = +(1/q) dEC/dx
1 dEC
E = q EC or Ex = q dx
1
1 dEV
E = q EV or Ex = q dx
1
1 dEi
E = q Ei or Ex = q dx
1
11
Energy Band Diagrams in electric fields III
The Electric Field always points into the
rise in the Conduction Band, EC.
Eelectron
Ex
EC
Ei
Eg EV
EREF
15
Green dye in a fishbowl …
If you placed green dye in a fishbowl, right in the center,
then let it diffuse, you would see it spread out in time until
it was evenly spread throughout the whole bowl. This
can be modeled using the simple-minded motion
described in the figure below. L-bar is the “mean
(average) free path between collisions” and t the mean
free time. Each time a particle collides, it’s new direction
is randomly determined. Consequently, half continue
going forward and half go backwards.
Dye Concentration 32
16 16
8 8 8 8
4 4 8 8 4 4
x
l -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 16
Diffusion II
Over a large scale, this would look more
like:
t=0
t1
Let’s look more in depth
t2 at this section of the
curve.
t3
tequilibrium
17
Diffusion III
Whatkind of a particle movement does Random Thermal
motion (and a concentration gradient) cause?
n(x)
nb0 It causes net motion from
nb1 large concentration regions
to small concentration
nb2 regions.
19
Diffusion V
Using the fact that slope (dn/dx) = -(nb1-nb2)/ℓ gives:
f = - 0.5*ℓ2 dn or f = -Dn*dn/dx (electrons)
t dx
or f = -Dp*dp/dx (holes)
= qDn dn
dx
(1 D) = qD p dx
dp
(1 D)
= qDnn (3 D) = qD pp (3 D)
20
Diffusion VI
Let’s look at an example:
n(x) dn/dx = 0 here
J(x)
22
Answering that old question
How can we have an electric + V -
or
Dp
E= 1 dp
m p p dx
Looks Looks
N-type P-type
23
Einstein Relationship
We next remember: p=niexp((Ei-EF)/kBT)
Plugging this into our equation for the electric
field and noting that dEF/dx = 0 … we get
The Einstein Relationships.
Dp k BT Dn k BT
mp
= q
and mn
= q
24
A sanity check
Pretend we have: What will be the fluxes
and currents?
x
Holes Mechanism Electrons
Ex
Diffusion
Flux (f)
Current Density (J)
n(x)
Drift
Flux (f)
p(x) Current Density (J)
25
Recombination – Generation I
Generation (G): How e- The concepts are
and h+ are produced or visually seen in the
created. energy band diagram
Recombination (R): below.
How e- and h+ are Ee
destroyed or removed G R
EC
hv hv G R
EV EC
x
Ee EV
Indirect via R-G centers
G R x
EC
R-G Center Energy Level
EV
x 28
GaAs is a
Direct Eg – The
Band Gap Band Gap
Semiconductor Energy
Direct
recombination
of electrons
with holes
occurs. The
electrons fall
from the bottom
of the CB to the
VB by giving
off a photon!
GaAs band structure produced by J. R. Chelikowsky and M. L. Cohen, Phys. Rev. B 14, 556 (1976)
using an empirical Pseudo-potential method see also: Cohen and Bergstrasser, Phys. Rev. 141, 789 (1966). 29
GaAs band structure produced by W. R. Frensley, Professor of EE @ UTD
using an empirical Pseudo-potential method see also: Cohen and Bergstrasser, Phys. Rev. 141, 789 (1966). 30
Si is an
Eg – The
Indirect
Band Gap
Band Gap
Energy
Semiconductor
Only indirect
recombination
of electrons
with holes
occurs. The
electrons fall
from the bottom
of the CB into
an R-G center
and from the
R-G center to the
VB. No photon!
Silicon band structure produced by J. R. Chelikowsky and M. L. Cohen, Phys. Rev. B 14, 556 (1976)
using an empirical Pseudo-potential method see also: Cohen and Bergstrasser, Phys. Rev. 141, 789 (1966). 31
Silicon band structure produced by W. R. Frensley, Professor of EE @ UTD
using an empirical Pseudo-potential method see also: Cohen and Bergstrasser, Phys. Rev. 141, 789 (1966). 32