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3.15 PN Junctions C.A. Ross, Department of Materials Science and Engineering

The document summarizes the behavior and characteristics of a pn junction diode under equilibrium, forward bias, and reverse bias conditions. When unbiased, diffusion of electrons and holes leads to a space charge region and built-in electric field. In forward bias, the energy barrier is reduced and diffusion current increases exponentially with applied voltage. In reverse bias, the barrier increases and only a small reverse saturation current flows as minority carriers are collected. The ideal diode equation describes the exponential relationship between current and applied voltage.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views3 pages

3.15 PN Junctions C.A. Ross, Department of Materials Science and Engineering

The document summarizes the behavior and characteristics of a pn junction diode under equilibrium, forward bias, and reverse bias conditions. When unbiased, diffusion of electrons and holes leads to a space charge region and built-in electric field. In forward bias, the energy barrier is reduced and diffusion current increases exponentially with applied voltage. In reverse bias, the barrier increases and only a small reverse saturation current flows as minority carriers are collected. The ideal diode equation describes the exponential relationship between current and applied voltage.

Uploaded by

Bimbim Ahmad
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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3.

15
pn Junctions
C.A. Ross, Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Reference: Pierret, chapter 5-6. Unbiased (equilibrium) pn junction Imagine an abrupt pn junction. The p side has a high hole concentration and the n side has a high electron concentration. There is immediate diffusion of the carriers down the concentration gradient. This leaves a space charge due to the ionized dopants. The resulting electric field leads to drift of carriers in the opposite direction compared to the diffusion flux. At equilibrium the drift and diffusion currents are balanced. p type n type

electron drift
electron diffusion
Ef
hole drift hole diffusion Ec
Ei Ev

charge density
p type ND n type
+ve dp dn distance x -ve NA Gauss law E = 1/or (x) dx where = e(p n + ND - NA)

Energy (i.e. position of energy bands) = eV; can be found from voltage vs distance; calculate from E = -dV/dx Depletion region width d = dp + dn (some books use d = xp + xn) Built-in voltage Vo: from earlier, n = ni exp (Ef - Ei)/kT

Handout 3

p = ni exp (Ei - Ef)/kT The Fermi level is flat across the junction: eVo = (Ef - Ei)n-type - (Ef - Ei)p-type
= kT/e ln (nn/np) or kT/e ln (NAND/ni2)
Using the depletion approximation = - NAe in the p-type and NDe in the ntype: E = NAe dp/or = NDe dp/or at x = 0 2 2 Vo = (e /2or ) (NDdn + NAdp ) dn = {(2orVo/e) (NA/(ND(ND + NA))} d = dp + dn = {(2orVo/e) (ND + NA)/ NAND} Biased pn junction (apply voltage VA)
Forward bias raises the n-side energy levels (or lowers the p-side)
by applying -ve to the n-side (or +ve to p-side)
This reduces the voltage barrier. The quasi-Fermi level is higher on the n-
side.
The diffusion term changes because the number of carriers eligible to diffuse
increases exponentially.
The drift term does not change.
Outside the depletion region there is a net diffusion current.
Reverse bias lowers the n-side energy levels. Diffusion is reduced; drift is unchanged. Only a small reverse current flows. Reverse bias increases the depletion width d = {(2or(Vo + VA)/e) (ND + NA)/ NAND} The ideal diode equation In forward bias the diffusion flux increases because more carriers are able to diffuse. This comes from the Fermi function. When Ef is away from the band edge, f(E) = 1/ {1 + exp (E Ef)/kT } ~ exp -(E Ef)/kT If we shift the energy levels by VA, we change the available number of carriers by a factor {exp -(e(Vo - VA) Ef)/kT} / {exp -(eVo Ef)/kT}
= exp eVA/kT

Handout 3

Therefore diffusion flux Jdiff = Jo exp eVA/kT To evaluate Jo, we know that Jo = -Jdrift = Jdiff at VA = 0. Consider an asymmetric junction with NA >> ND, then the current is mainly holes, and their concentration decays in the n-type material (outside the depletion region) over a distance p = (pDp). The diffusion current Jdiff = eDp p = eDp (pn(x=0) pno)/ p (where pno = ni2 /ND) ~ eDp (pn(x=0))/ p
pn = pp exp eVo/kT (unbiased)
and pn = pp exp e(Vo-VA)/kT (forward biased)
so pn = pno exp eVA/kT
Hence Jdiff = {eDp ni2 /NDp} exp eVA/kT = Jo exp eVA/kT Include both electron and hole terms: Jo = eni2 {Dp/NDp + Dn/NAn} Also, Jdrift = Jo gives an expression for Jdrift The ideal diode equation is then J = Jdiff + Jdrift = Jo {exp eVA/kT 1} What happens in reverse bias? The current reaches a reverse saturation value of Jo (~10-12 A cm-2 in Si) All minority carriers reaching the depletion region are sucked across (i.e. the junction collects minority carriers). There is no diffusion flux across the depletion region. There is a diffusion flux outside the depletion region that supplies minority carriers to the junction: its value is just -eni2 { pnoDp/p + npo Dn/n} = - Jo. Reverse bias pn junction collects minority carriers
Forward bias pn junction injects minority carriers
Non-idealities: a) Reverse bias Zener breakdown, where carriers tunnel through a narrow depletion width b) Avalanche diode, where impact ionization generates more carriers in the depletion region.

Handout 3

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