Announcements HW 1 is posted due Tuesday 94
- Slides: 28
Announcements • HW 1 is posted, due Tuesday 9/4 • Discussion Section 102 (We 9 -10) moved to 289 Cory • TA office hrs will be held in 353 Cory until further notice. • Lab sections: – The Wed. PM section is over-subscribed! The following students will likely need to sign up for an alternative section: Chang, Phillip Cockrell, Matthew Dwan, Kevin Li, Xue Cong Liu, Guan Quan Park, Manjae Toriyama, Yuta Tran, Anthony – Final lab section assignments will be posted online on 9/1. • Paid position for videotaping EE 105 lectures is available EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 1, 2, Slide 1 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Lecture 2 OUTLINE • Basic Semiconductor Physics (cont’d) – Carrier drift and diffusion • PN Junction Diodes – Electrostatics – Capacitance Reading: Chapter 2. 1 -2. 2 EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 1, 2, Slide 2 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Dopant Compensation • An N-type semiconductor can be converted into Ptype material by counter-doping it with acceptors such that NA > ND. • A compensated semiconductor material has both acceptors and donors. N-type material (ND > NA) EE 105 Fall 2007 P-type material (NA > ND) Lecture 2, Slide 3 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Types of Charge in a Semiconductor • Negative charges: – Conduction electrons (density = n) – Ionized donor atoms (density = ND) • Positive charges: – Holes (density = p) – Ionized acceptor atoms (density = NA) • The net charge density (C/cm 3) in a semiconductor is EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 4 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Carrier Drift • The process in which charged particles move because of an electric field is called drift. • Charged particles within a semiconductor move with an average velocity proportional to the electric field. – The proportionality constant is the carrier mobility. Hole velocity Electron velocity Notation: mp hole mobility (cm 2/V·s) mn electron mobility (cm 2/V·s) EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 5 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Velocity Saturation • In reality, carrier velocities saturate at an upper limit, called the saturation velocity (vsat). EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 6 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Drift Current • Drift current is proportional to the carrier velocity and carrier concentration: vh t A = volume from which all holes cross plane in time t p vh t A = # of holes crossing plane in time t q p vh t A = charge crossing plane in time t q p vh A = charge crossing plane per unit time = hole current Hole current per unit area (i. e. current density) Jp, drift = q p vh EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 7 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Conductivity and Resistivity • In a semiconductor, both electrons and holes conduct current: • The conductivity of a semiconductor is – Unit: mho/cm • The resistivity of a semiconductor is – Unit: ohm-cm EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 8 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Resistivity Example • Estimate the resistivity of a Si sample doped with phosphorus to a concentration of 1015 cm-3 and boron to a concentration of 1017 cm-3. The electron mobility and hole mobility are 800 cm 2/Vs and 300 cm 2/Vs, respectively. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 9 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Electrical Resistance I V + _ W t homogeneously doped sample L (Unit: ohms) Resistance where r is the resistivity EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 10 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Carrier Diffusion • Due to thermally induced random motion, mobile particles tend to move from a region of high concentration to a region of low concentration. – Analogy: ink droplet in water • Current flow due to mobile charge diffusion is proportional to the carrier concentration gradient. – The proportionality constant is the diffusion constant. Notation: Dp hole diffusion constant (cm 2/s) Dn electron diffusion constant (cm 2/s) EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 11 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Diffusion Examples • Linear concentration profile constant diffusion current EE 105 Fall 2007 • Non-linear concentration profile varying diffusion current Lecture 2, Slide 12 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Diffusion Current • Diffusion current within a semiconductor consists of hole and electron components: • The total current flowing in a semiconductor is the sum of drift current and diffusion current: EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 13 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
The Einstein Relation • The characteristic constants for drift and diffusion are related: • Note that at room temperature (300 K) – This is often referred to as the “thermal voltage”. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 14 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
The PN Junction Diode • When a P-type semiconductor region and an N-type semiconductor region are in contact, a PN junction diode is formed. V – D + ID EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 15 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Diode Operating Regions • In order to understand the operation of a diode, it is necessary to study its behavior in three operation regions: equilibrium, reverse bias, and forward bias. VD = 0 EE 105 Fall 2007 VD < 0 Lecture 2, Slide 16 VD > 0 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Carrier Diffusion across the Junction • Because of the difference in hole and electron concentrations on each side of the junction, carriers diffuse across the junction: Notation: nn electron concentration on N-type side (cm-3) pn hole concentration on N-type side (cm-3) pp hole concentration on P-type side (cm-3) np electron concentration on P-type side (cm-3) EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 17 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Depletion Region • As conduction electrons and holes diffuse across the junction, they leave behind ionized dopants. Thus, a region that is depleted of mobile carriers is formed. – The charge density in the depletion region is not zero. – The carriers which diffuse across the junction recombine with majority carriers, i. e. they are annihilated. quasineutral region width=Wdep region EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 18 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Carrier Drift across the Junction • Because charge density ≠ 0 in the depletion region, an electric field exists, hence there is drift current. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 19 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
PN Junction in Equilibrium • In equilibrium, the drift and diffusion components of current are balanced; therefore the net current flowing across the junction is zero. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 20 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Built-in Potential, V 0 • Because of the electric field in the depletion region, there exists a potential drop across the junction: (Unit: Volts) EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 21 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Built-In Potential Example • Estimate the built-in potential for PN junction below. – Note that EE 105 Fall 2007 N P ND = 1018 cm-3 NA = 1015 cm-3 Lecture 2, Slide 22 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
PN Junction under Reverse Bias • A reverse bias increases the potential drop across the junction. As a result, the magnitude of the electric field increases and the width of the depletion region widens. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 23 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Diode Current under Reverse Bias • In equilibrium, the built-in potential effectively prevents carriers from diffusing across the junction. • Under reverse bias, the potential drop across the junction increases; therefore, negligible diffusion current flows. A very small drift current flows, limited by the rate at which minority carriers diffuse from the quasi-neutral regions into the depletion region. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 24 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
PN Junction Capacitance • A reverse-biased PN junction can be viewed as a capacitor. The depletion width (Wdep) and hence the junction capacitance (Cj) varies with VR. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 25 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Voltage-Dependent Capacitance VD esi 10 -12 F/cm is the permittivity of silicon. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 26 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Reverse-Biased Diode Application • A very important application of a reverse-biased PN junction is in a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO), which uses an LC tank. By changing VR, we can change C, which changes the oscillation frequency. EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 27 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
Summary • Current flowing in a semiconductor is comprised of drift and diffusion components: • A region depleted of mobile charge exists at the junction between P-type and N-type materials. – A built-in potential drop (V 0) across this region is established by the charge density profile; it opposes diffusion of carriers across the junction. A reverse bias voltage serves to enhance the potential drop across the depletion region, resulting in very little (drift) current flowing across the junction. – The width of the depletion region (Wdep) is a function of the bias voltage (VD). EE 105 Fall 2007 Lecture 2, Slide 28 Prof. Liu, UC Berkeley
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