212 EE203 Chapter1
212 EE203 Chapter1
212 EE203 Chapter1
- Basics of Semiconductors -
• Silicon atom
• Each pair of shared e-
forms a covalent bond
• The atoms form a
crystal/lattice structure
• Silicon at low temp: No electrons available for conduction
Conductivity is zero (Insulator)
3.1: Intrinsic Semiconductors
• Silicon at room temp: Some covalent bonds break, freeing an
electron and creating hole, due to thermal energy Conductivity
– is greater than zero
• silicon at low temps: • silicon at room temp:
• all covalent bonds are intact • sufficient thermal energy exists
• no electrons are available for to break some covalent bonds,
conduction freeing an electron and creating
• conducitivity is zero hole
• a free electron may wander from
its parent atom
the process of freeing electrons, creating holes,
• a hole will attract neighboring
and filling them facilitates current flow
electrons
1.7. Intrinsic Semiconductors
• Intrinsic semiconductor = without impurities (e.g. pure silicon).
• BUT Silicon is not sufficiently conductive at room temperature!
Solution is Doping – the intentional introduction of impurities into
a pure (intrinsic) semiconductor for the purpose changing carrier
(charges) concentrations.
Drift Current: Applied electric field (E) Diffusion current: Flow of charges due
accelerates holes and electrons. The two to their non-uniform distribution.
currents sum to produce drift current in (Charge flow from area of high
the direction of E. concentration to low concentration)
diffusion
inject occurs
holes
concentration
profile arises
Current density
1.9.1. Drift Current = I/Area [A/m2]
Two important concepts:
Ohm's Law
1 field
(eq3.14) J E Elect.
q(p=p V/Dist.
nn )[V/m]
• Conductivity (s.) = how 1
easy charges can travel(eq3.16) q(p p nn ) q(p n
across a material. p
Mobility
1
s = 1/ r (eq3.15) J E /
q(p p nn )
• Resistivity (r.) = How (eq3.17) 1
much a material opposes q(p p nn )
to the flow of charges.
1.10.1. Physical Structure of a p-n junction
• pn junction structure
• p-type semiconductor
• n-type semiconductor
• metal contact for connection
Step #1: Bound charges are attracted (from environment) by free
electrons and holes in the p-type and n-type semiconductors,
respectively. They remain weakly “bound” to these majority carriers;
however, they do not recombine.
p-type n-type
p-type n-type
p-type n-type
barrier voltage
(Vo)
location (x)
Built-in (Barrier) voltage (V0) = 0.6 and 0.9V for silicon
1.11.1. Qualitative Description of Junction
Operation
• Figure shows pn-junction
under three conditions:
• (a) open-circuit – where
a barrier voltage V0
exists.
• (b) reverse bias – where
a dc voltage VR is
applied.
The pn junction in: (a)
• (c) forward bias – where
equilibrium; (b) reverse bias; (c)
a dc voltage VF is
applied. forward bias.
1) no voltage 1) negative voltage 1) positive voltage
applied applied applied
2) voltage differential 2) voltage differential 2) voltage differential
across depletion zone across depletion zone across depletion zone
is V0 is V0 + VR is V0 - VF
• Figure to right shows pn-junction under three conditions:
3) ID = I•S 3) ID < IS 3) ID > IS
(a) open-circuit – where a barrier voltage V0 exists.
• (b) reverse bias – where a dc voltage VR is applied.
• (c) forward bias – where a dc voltage VF is applied.
VF
p-type n-type
VF
p-type n-type
VF
p-type n-type