Fundamentals of Microelectronics

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Fundamentals of Microelectronics

 CH1 Why Microelectronics?


 CH2 Basic Physics of Semiconductors
 CH3 Diode Circuits
 CH4 Physics of Bipolar Transistors
 CH5 Bipolar Amplifiers
 CH6 Physics of MOS Transistors
 CH7 CMOS Amplifiers
 CH8 Operational Amplifier As A Black Box

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Chapter 2 Basic Physics of Semiconductors

 2.1 Semiconductor materials and their properties

 2.2 PN-junction diodes

 2.3 Reverse Breakdown

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Semiconductor Physics

 Semiconductor devices serve as heart of microelectronics.


 PN junction is the most fundamental semiconductor
device.

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Charge Carriers in Semiconductor

 To understand PN junction’s IV characteristics, it is


important to understand charge carriers’ behavior in solids,
how to modify carrier densities, and different mechanisms
of charge flow.

4
Periodic Table

 This abridged table contains elements with three to five


valence electrons, with Si being the most important.

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Silicon

 Si has four valence electrons. Therefore, it can form


covalent bonds with four of its neighbors.
 When temperature goes up, electrons in the covalent bond
can become free.

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Electron-Hole Pair Interaction

 With free electrons breaking off covalent bonds, holes are


generated.
 Holes can be filled by absorbing other free electrons, so
effectively there is a flow of charge carriers.

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Free Electron Density at a Given Temperature

15 3/ 2
 Eg
ni  5.2 10 T exp electrons / cm 3
2kT
ni (T  3000 K )  1.08  1010 electrons / cm 3
ni (T  6000 K )  1.54  1015 electrons / cm 3

 Eg, or bandgap energy determines how much effort is


needed to break off an electron from its covalent bond.
 There exists an exponential relationship between the free-
electron density and bandgap energy.

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Doping (N type)

 Pure Si can be doped with other elements to change its


electrical properties.
 For example, if Si is doped with P (phosphorous), then it
has more electrons, or becomes type N (electron).

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Doping (P type)

 If Si is doped with B (boron), then it has more holes, or


becomes type P.

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Summary of Charge Carriers

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Electron and Hole Densities

2
np  ni
Majority Carriers : p  NA
2
n
Minority Carriers : n i
NA
n  ND
Majority Carriers : 2
n
p i
Minority Carriers : ND

 The product of electron and hole densities is ALWAYS


equal to the square of intrinsic electron density regardless
of doping levels.

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First Charge Transportation Mechanism: Drift

 
vh   p E
 
ve    n E

 The process in which charge particles move because of an


electric field is called drift.
 Charge particles will move at a velocity that is proportional
to the electric field.

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Current Flow: General Case

I  v  W  h  n  q

 Electric current is calculated as the amount of charge in v


meters that passes thru a cross-section if the charge travel
with a velocity of v m/s.
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Current Flow: Drift

J n  n E  n  q
J tot   n E  n  q   p E  p  q
 q(  n n   p p) E

 Since velocity is equal to E, drift characteristic is obtained


by substituting V with E in the general current equation.
 The total current density consists of both electrons and
holes.

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Velocity Saturation

0

1  bE
0
vsat 
b
0
v  E
0 E
1
vsat
 A topic treated in more advanced courses is velocity
saturation.
 In reality, velocity does not increase linearly with electric
field. It will eventually saturate to a critical value.

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Second Charge Transportation Mechanism:
Diffusion

 Charge particles move from a region of high concentration


to a region of low concentration. It is analogous to an
every day example of an ink droplet in water.
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Current Flow: Diffusion

dn dp
I  AqDn J p  qD p
dx dx
dn dn dp
J n  qDn J tot  q( Dn  Dp )
dx dx dx

 Diffusion current is proportional to the gradient of charge


(dn/dx) along the direction of current flow.
 Its total current density consists of both electrons and
holes.

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Example: Linear vs. Nonlinear Charge Density
Profile

dn N dn  qDn N x
J n  qDn   qDn  J n  qD  exp
dx L dx Ld Ld

 Linear charge density profile means constant diffusion


current, whereas nonlinear charge density profile means
varying diffusion current.

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Einstein's Relation

D kT

 q

 While the underlying physics behind drift and diffusion


currents are totally different, Einstein’s relation provides a
mysterious link between the two.
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PN Junction (Diode)

 When N-type and P-type dopants are introduced side-by-


side in a semiconductor, a PN junction or a diode is formed.
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Diode’s Three Operation Regions

 In order to understand the operation of a diode, it is


necessary to study its three operation regions:
equilibrium, reverse bias, and forward bias.

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Current Flow Across Junction: Diffusion

 Because each side of the junction contains an excess of


holes or electrons compared to the other side, there exists
a large concentration gradient. Therefore, a diffusion
current flows across the junction from each side.
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Depletion Region

 As free electrons and holes diffuse across the junction, a


region of fixed ions is left behind. This region is known as
the “depletion region.”

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Current Flow Across Junction: Drift

 The fixed ions in depletion region create an electric field


that results in a drift current.

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Current Flow Across Junction: Equilibrium

I drift , p  I diff , p
I drift , n  I diff , n

 At equilibrium, the drift current flowing in one direction


cancels out the diffusion current flowing in the opposite
direction, creating a net current of zero.
 The figure shows the charge profile of the PN junction.

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Built-in Potential

dp dV dp
q p pE   qD p  p p   Dp
dx dx dx
x
2 p
n
dp Dp p p
 p  dV D p  V ( x2 )  V ( x1 )  ln
x
1 p
p
p  p pn
kT p p kT N A N D
V0  ln ,V0  ln 2
q pn q ni

 Because of the electric field across the junction, there


exists a built-in potential. Its derivation is shown above.

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Diode in Reverse Bias

 When the N-type region of a diode is connected to a higher


potential than the P-type region, the diode is under reverse
bias, which results in wider depletion region and larger
built-in electric field across the junction.
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Reverse Biased Diode’s Application: Voltage-
Dependent Capacitor

 The PN junction can be viewed as a capacitor. By varying


VR, the depletion width changes, changing its capacitance
value; therefore, the PN junction is actually a voltage-
dependent capacitor.
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Voltage-Dependent Capacitance

C j0
Cj 
V
1 R
V0
 si q N A N D 1
C j0 
2 N A  N D V0

 The equations that describe the voltage-dependent


capacitance are shown above.

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Voltage-Controlled Oscillator

1 1
f res 
2 LC

 A very important application of a reverse-biased PN


junction is VCO, in which an LC tank is used in an
oscillator. By changing VR, we can change C, which also
changes the oscillation frequency.

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Diode in Forward Bias

 When the N-type region of a diode is at a lower potential


than the P-type region, the diode is in forward bias.
 The depletion width is shortened and the built-in electric
field decreased.

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Minority Carrier Profile in Forward Bias

p p ,e
pn , e 
V0
exp
VT

p p, f
pn , f 
V0  VF
exp
VT

 Under forward bias, minority carriers in each region


increase due to the lowering of built-in field/potential.
Therefore, diffusion currents increase to supply these
minority carriers.
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Diffusion Current in Forward Bias

ND V NA V
n p  (exp F  1) pn  (exp F  1)
V VT V VT
exp 0 exp 0
VT VT
NA V ND V
I tot  (exp F  1)  (exp F  1)
V0 V V0 VT
exp T exp
VT VT
VF 2 Dn Dp
I tot  I s (exp  1) I s  Aqni (  )
VT N A Ln N D L p

 Diffusion current will increase in order to supply the


increase in minority carriers. The mathematics are shown
above.
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Minority Charge Gradient

 Minority charge profile should not be constant along the x-


axis; otherwise, there is no concentration gradient and no
diffusion current.
 Recombination of the minority carriers with the majority
carriers accounts for the dropping of minority carriers as
they go deep into the P or N region.
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Forward Bias Condition: Summary

 In forward bias, there are large diffusion currents of


minority carriers through the junction. However, as we go
deep into the P and N regions, recombination currents from
the majority carriers dominate. These two currents add up
to a constant value.

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IV Characteristic of PN Junction

VD
I D  I S (exp  1)
VT

 The current and voltage relationship of a PN junction is


exponential in forward bias region, and relatively constant
in reverse bias region.

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Parallel PN Junctions

 Since junction currents are proportional to the junction’s


cross-section area. Two PN junctions put in parallel are
effectively one PN junction with twice the cross-section
area, and hence twice the current.
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Constant-Voltage Diode Model

 Diode operates as an open circuit if VD< VD,on and a constant


voltage source of VD,on if VD tends to exceed VD,on.

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Example: Diode Calculations

IX
VX  I X R1  VD  I X R1  VT ln
IS
I X  2.2mA for VX  3V
I X  0.2mA for VX  1V

 This example shows the simplicity provided by a constant-


voltage model over an exponential model.
 For an exponential model, iterative method is needed to
solve for current, whereas constant-voltage model requires
only linear equations.

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Reverse Breakdown

 When a large reverse bias voltage is applied, breakdown


occurs and an enormous current flows through the diode.
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Zener vs. Avalanche Breakdown

 Zener breakdown is a result of the large electric field inside


the depletion region that breaks electrons or holes off their
covalent bonds.
 Avalanche breakdown is a result of electrons or holes
colliding with the fixed ions inside the depletion region.
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