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I. Carrier Transport: Drift A. Drift Velocity: J P Diff Q PX A PX A A C

I. Carrier transport occurs through drift and diffusion. II. Drift is the movement of charged carriers in response to an electric field. Electrons drift opposite the field direction while holes drift in the field direction. III. Diffusion is the movement of carriers down concentration gradients. Holes diffuse toward lower concentrations while electrons diffuse toward higher concentrations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views9 pages

I. Carrier Transport: Drift A. Drift Velocity: J P Diff Q PX A PX A A C

I. Carrier transport occurs through drift and diffusion. II. Drift is the movement of charged carriers in response to an electric field. Electrons drift opposite the field direction while holes drift in the field direction. III. Diffusion is the movement of carriers down concentration gradients. Holes diffuse toward lower concentrations while electrons diffuse toward higher concentrations.

Uploaded by

Reza Latif
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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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I.

Carrier Transport: Drift


B.
A. Diffusion Current Density- Holes
Drift Velocity
• Current density = (charge) x (# carriers per second per area):

(a) Thermal Equilibrium, E = 0 p -1 ( x – λ ) Aλ – -1(b)pElectric (x + Field λ) Aλ E>0


diff 2 2
J
Electron # 1 p
= q --------------------------------------------------------------
Electron # 1
-
Aτ c
E
• If we assume the mean free path is much smaller than the dimensions
x
then we can consider λ = dx xand
xi xf,1 i xf,1 x
of our device, use
#2
a Taylor
Electron expansion on p(x - λ) and p(x #+2 λ):
Electron

diff d px
• J x =
xi – qD
p , where Dp = λ2xf,2/ τc is xthe diffusionx coefficent
p f,2 dx
i

Electron # 3 Electron # 3

• Holes diffuse down the concentration gradient and carryE positive


charge.
xf,3 xi x xf,3 xi x

* xi = initial position * xf, n = final position of electron n after 7 collisions

• Electrons drifting in an Electric Field move (on average) with a drift


velocity which is proportional to the Electric Field, E.

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
Drift Velocity (Cont.)

Velocity
in Direction
of E Field

t
qE
v = at = ± ------- t
m

 qτ c 
v ave =  – ----------  E
 2m n 
• mn is an effective mass to take into account quantum mechanics
• Lump it into a quantity we call mobility µn (units:cm2/V-s)

vd = -µnE

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
B. Electron and Hole Mobility
• mobilities vary with doping concentration-- plot is for 300K

1400

1200
electrons
1000
mobility (cm2/Vs)

800

600
holes
400

200

0
1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020
Nd + Na total dopant concentration (cm−3)

• “typical values” for bulk silicon -- 300 K

µn = 1000 cm2/(Vs)

µp = 400 cm2/(Vs)

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
C. Velocity Saturation
• At electric fields greater >~ 104 V/cm
• Drift velocities saturate --> max. out at around 107 V/cm.
• Velocity saturation is very common in VLSI devices, due to sub-
micron dimensions

−vdn, vdp
(cm/s)
108

107

electrons
106
holes
105

104

103

10 102 103 104 105 E


(V/cm)

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
D. Drift Current Density
• Electrons drift against electric field
• Electrons carry negative charge
• Jn dr = (-q) n vd units: Ccm-2 s-1 = Acm-2

Jndr = (-q) n (- µn E) = q n µn E

• Holes drift with electric field


• vd = µp E
• Jp dr = (+q) p vd

Jp dr = q p µp E

Caution:: The linear relationship between field and drift velocity breaks down for
high electric fields.

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
II. Carrier Transport: Diffusion

A. Diffusion
• Diffusion is a transport process driven by gradients in the
concentration of particles in random motion undergoing frequent
collisions.
• Average carrier velocity = vth = 107 cm/s
• Average interval between collisions = τc = 10-13 s = 0.1 picoseconds
• mean free path = λ = vth τc = 10-6 cm = 10 nm

reference plane
(area = A)
p(x)
hole diffusion

Jpdiff (positive)
p(xr − λ)
volume Aλ:
p(xr + λ) volume Aλ:
holes moving
holes moving
in + x direction cross
in − x direction cross
reference plane within
reference plane within
∆t = τc.
∆t = τc.

x
xr − λ xr xr + λ

• Since their motion is random, half of the carriers in each volume


will pass through the plane before their next collision.

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
B. Diffusion Current Density- Holes
• Current density = (charge) x (# carriers per second per area):

-1 [ p ( x – λ ) ] Aλ – -1 [ p(x + λ) ] Aλ
diff 2 2
J
p
= q ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aτ c
:
• If we assume the mean free path is much smaller than the dimensions
of our device, then we can consider λ = dx and use
a Taylor expansion on p(x - λ) and p(x + λ):

diff dp
• J = – qD p where Dp = λ2 / τc is the diffusion coefficent
p dx

• Holes diffuse down the concentration gradient and carry positive


charge.

p(x)

Jpdiff ( > 0)

Jpdiff ( < 0)

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
C. Diffusion Current Density - Electrons
• Electrons diffuse down the concentration gradient, yet carry negative
charge --> electron diffusion current density points in the direction
of the gradient

n(x)
Jndiff ( < 0)

Jndiff ( > 0)

D. Einstein Relation
• Both mobility and the diffusion constant are related to the mean time
between collisions τc. There is a relation between these important
quantities called the Einstein Relationship.

D D
p kT n kT
-------- = ------ and ------- = ------
µ q µ q
p n

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3
III. Total Current Density

dr diff dn
J
n
= J
n
+ Jn = qnµ E
n
+ q Dn
dx

dr diff dp
J
p
= J
p
+ Jp = qpµ E
p
– qDp
dx

• Fortunately, we will be able to eliminate one or the other component


in finding the internal currents in microelectronic devices.

EECS 6.012 Spring 1998


Lecture 3

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