Week3HW S15 Solutions
Week3HW S15 Solutions
1− f ( EV ) = e− EG 2k BT
= 4.43× 10−10
As
expected,
when
the
Fermi
level
is
exactly
in
the
middle
of
the
bandgap,
the
probability
that
a
state
at
the
conduction
band
edge
is
occupied
is
exactly
the
same
as
the
probability
that
a
state
at
the
valence
band
edge
is
empty.
2) For
Si
at
room
temperature,
calculate
the
following
quantities.
(Numerical
answers
required,
and
don’t
forget
to
include
units
with
your
answers).
( )
a) The
density
of
states
in
the
conduction
band, gC E ,
at
an
energy
26
meV
above
EC .
b) The
density
of
states
in
the
valence
band,
gV ( E ) ,
at
an
energy
26
meV
below
E V
.
c) The
effective
density
of
conduction
band
states. N C .
d) The
effective
density
of
valence
band
states,
NV .
e) Compute
the
ratio
of
the
effective
density
of
conduction
band
states
to
the
atomic
density
of
Si.
A
note
about
units.
Calculations
should
be
done
in
the
MKS
system
of
units
(also
called
SI).
All
of
the
fundamental
constants
(e.g.
Plank’s
constant,
Boltzmann’s
constant,
rest
mass
of
an
electron,
etc.)
are
in
these
units.
After
we
have
an
answer,
it
is
often
convenient
to
convert
to
different
units.
For
example,
in
semiconductor
work,
we
like
to
quote
carrier
and
doping
densities
per
cubic
cm,
not
per
cubic
meter,
which
is
the
proper
MKS
unit.
Be
careful
about
units!
2b)
Begin
with
the
DOS
expression
(SDF,
eqn.(2.6b),
p.
41)
m*p 2m*p ( EV − E )
gV ( E ) =
E < EV
π 2!3
3/2
m0 2m0 ⎛ m*p ⎞
gV ( E ) = ⎜ ⎟ EV − E
π 2 ! 3 ⎝ m0 ⎠
3/2
9.11× 10−31 2 × 9.11× 10−31 ⎛ mp ⎞
*
NC
= 0.06 %
N Si
The
number
of
states
near
the
bottom
of
the
conduction
band
that
can
be
occupied
is
a
small
fraction
of
the
density
of
silicon
atoms.
Solution:
3a)
For
intrinsic
material,
we
know
that
n = p = ni .
According
to
SDF,
p.
54,
ni = 1.00 × 1010 cm -3
so
n = p = ni = 1.00 × 1010 cm -3
3b)
First,
let’s
ask
what
to
expect.
The
donor
density
is
1000
times
the
intrinsic
density.
All
of
the
donor
electrons
will
go
in
the
conduction
band,
overwhelming
the
number
of
intrinsic
carriers
that
were
there.
So
we
expect
n ≈ N D = 1.00 × 1013 cm -3
We
would
determine
the
hole
density
from
np = ni2 ,
so
ni2 ni2 1020
p= ≈ = 13 = 1.00 × 107 cm -3
n N D 10
Note
that
doping
the
semiconductor
n-‐type
means
that
we
now
have
more
electrons
in
the
conduction
band,
and
we
have
fewer
holes
in
the
valence
band
than
for
the
intrinsic
semiconductor.
How
would
we
do
this
problem
more
accurately?
Begin
by
assuming
that
the
semiconductor
is
neutral:
p − n + N D+ − N A− = 0
Assume
that
the
dopants
are
fully
ionized
and
use
p = ni2 n
ni2
− n + N D − N A = 0
n
n = 5.00 × 102 cm -3
( 2.5 × 10 ) + ( 2.865 × 10 )
2 2
n = 2.5 × 1016 + 16 16
n = 2.5 × 1016 + 6.25 × 1032 + 8.21× 1032 = 6.3× 1016
n = 6.3× 1016 cm -3
( )
2
ni2 2.865 × 1016 8.21× 1032
p= = = = 1.30 × 1016 cm -3
n 6.3× 1016 6.3× 1016
p = 1.30 × 1016 cm -3
For
the
case
of
3a)
n = p = ni = 1.00 × 1010 cm -3
(E F − Ei )
= 0.026ln 1 = 0
()
q
(E F
− Ei )
= 0
or
we
could
say:
( E F − Ei ) = 0 eV
q
For
the
case
of
3b)
n = 1.00 × 1013 cm -3
(E F
− Ei ) ⎛ 1013 ⎞
= 0.026ln ⎜ 10 ⎟ = 0.180
q ⎝ 10 ⎠
(E F
− Ei )
= 0.180
q
(E F
− Ei )
= − 0.419
q
Note
the
sign
–
the
Fermi
level
is
now
below
the
intrinsic
level
because
this
is
a
p-‐
type
semiconductor.
For
the
case
of
3e)
n = 5.00 × 102 cm -3
(E F − Ei ) ⎛ 5 × 102 ⎞
q
= 0.026ln ⎜
⎝ 10 ⎠
10 ⎟ ( )
= 0.026ln 5 × 10−8 = − 0.437
(E F
− Ei )
= − 0.437
q
Also
a
p-‐type
semiconductor,
so
the
Fermi
level
is
below
the
intrinsic
level.
We
computed
N C
in
prob.
2c:
N C = 3.22 × 1019 cm −3
( EF − EC ) = 0.026ln ⎛ n ⎞
q ⎜⎝ 3.22 × 1019 ⎟⎠
Note
that
this
quantity
will
be
negative
for
a
non-‐degenerate
semiconductor,
because
the
Fermi
level
is
always
well
below
the
conduction
band.
For
case
3a)
n = p = ni = 1.00 × 1010 cm -3
(E F − EC )
= 0.026ln ⎜
⎛ 1010 ⎞
= −0.569
⎝ 3.22 × 10 ⎟⎠
19
q
(E F
− EC )
= −0.569
or
we
could
say:
( E F − EC ) = −0.569 eV
q