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Lecture89 - 12284 - Diode and Its Applications - L 1

The document discusses PN junction diodes and their applications. It begins with basic diode concepts like energy band diagrams and the behavior of intrinsic and doped semiconductors. It then covers PN junction formation and the effects of forward and reverse biasing. Key diode characteristics like the Shockley equation and I-V curve are presented. Ideal diode models are introduced for circuit analysis. Finally, common rectifier circuits like half-wave and full-wave bridges are described.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views22 pages

Lecture89 - 12284 - Diode and Its Applications - L 1

The document discusses PN junction diodes and their applications. It begins with basic diode concepts like energy band diagrams and the behavior of intrinsic and doped semiconductors. It then covers PN junction formation and the effects of forward and reverse biasing. Key diode characteristics like the Shockley equation and I-V curve are presented. Ideal diode models are introduced for circuit analysis. Finally, common rectifier circuits like half-wave and full-wave bridges are described.

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basuslathia01
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 22

ECE249:

Unit-4
PN junction diode and its applications

1
Basic Diode Concepts
* Energy Diagrams – Insulator, Semiconductor, and Conductor
the energy diagram for the three types of solids

2
Intrinsic Semiconductors
* Intrinsic (pure) Si Semiconductor:

When equilibrium between


excitation and recombination
is reached :
electron density  hole density
n i  p i  1.5 1010 cm -3
for intrinsic Si crystal at 300 K
( Note : Si crystal atom density
is ~ 5 10 22 cm -3 )

3
Intrinsic Semiconductors
*Apply a voltage across
a piece of Si:
electron current
and hole current

4
N- and P- Type Semiconductors
* Doping: adding of impurities (i.e., dopants) to the intrinsic semi-
conductor material.
* N-type: adding Group V dopant (or donor) such as As, P, Sb,…

n  p  constant for a semiconductor


For Si at 300K

n  p  ni2  pi2  1.5  10 10 
2

In n - type material
n  N d the donor conceration
n  N d  ni , p  pi
We call
electron the major charge carrier
hole the minor cahage carrier

5
N- and P- Type Semiconductors
* Doping: adding of impurities (i.e., dopants) to the intrinsic semi-
conductor material.
* P-type: adding Group III dopant (or acceptor) such as Al, B, Ga,…

n  p  constant for a semiconductor


For Si at 300K
2
i
2
i 
n  p  n  p  1.5  10 
10 2

In p - type material
p  N a the acceptor conceration
p  N a  pi , n  ni
We call
hole the major charge carrier
electron the minor cahage carrier

6
The PN-Junction
* The interface in-between p-type and n-type material is called a
pn-junction.
The barrier potential VB  0.6  0.7V for Si and 0.3V for Ge
at 300K : as T  ,VB  .

7
Biasing the PN-Junction
* There is no movement of charge
through a PN-junction at
equilibrium.
* The PN-junction form a diode
which allows current in only one
direction and prevent the current
in the other direction as
determined by the bias.

8
Diodes – Basic Diode Concepts
Biasing the PN-Junction
*Forward Bias: dc voltage positive terminal connected to the p region
and negative to the n region. It is the condition that permits
current through the pn-junction of a diode.

9
Biasing the PN-Junction
*Forward Bias:

10
Diodes – Basic Diode Concepts

*Reverse Bias: dc voltage negative terminal connected to the p region and


positive to the n region. Depletion region widens until its potential
difference equals the bias voltage, majority-carrier current ceases.

11
2. Diodes – Basic Diode Concepts
*Reverse Bias:
majority-carrier current ceases.
* However, there is still a very
small current produced by
minority carriers.

12
2. Diodes – Basic Diode Concepts
Biasing the PN-Junction
* Reverse Breakdown: As reverse voltage reach certain value, avalanche
occurs and generates large current.

Diode Characteristic I-V Curve

13
Shockley Equation
* The Shockley equation is a theoretical result
under certain simplification:
  vD  
i D  I s exp   1
  n VT  
where I s  10 -14 A at 300K is the (reverse) saturation
current, n  1 to 2 is the emission coefficien t,
kT
VT   0.026V at 300K is the thermal voltage
q
k is the Boltzman' s constant, q  1.60  10 -19 C
 v 
when v D  0.1V, i D  I s exp D 
 n VT 
This equation is not applicable when v D  0

14
Diode Testing

15
Ideal-Diode Model
* We may apply “Ideal-Diode Model” to simplify the analysis:
(1) in forward direction: short-circuit assumption, zero voltage drop;
(2) in reverse direction: open-circuit assumption.
* The ideal-diode model can be used when the forward voltage drop and
reverse currents are negligible.

16
2. Piecewise-Linear Diode Models
Modified Ideal-Diode Model

* This modified ideal-diode model is usually accurate enough in


most of the circuit analysis.

17
Application
Rectifier Circuits
* Rectifiers convert ac power to dc power.
* Rectifiers form the basis for electronic power suppliers and battery
charging circuits.
Half-Wave
Rectifier

18
Center-Tapped Full wave rectifiers
 A center-tapped transformer is used with two diodes that conduct on alternating
half-cycles.

F D1
+ – During the negative half-cycle, the
lower diode is forward-biased and the
+
I upper diode is reverse-biased.
Vin Vout

0 0 D1
+ + F
– +
RL
– –

– + V in V out
D2
+
0 0
During the positive half-cycle, the upper – +
diode is forward-biased and the lower diode RL
is reverse-biased. I –
+
+ –
D2

19
Bridge Full-wave rectifiers
 The Bridge Full-Wave rectifier uses four diodes connected across the entire
secondary as shown.
F

I
D3 D1
+ +
Vin
– – + Conduction path for the
RL Vout 0 negative half-cycle.
D2 D4 –
F

Conduction path for the I


positive half-cycle. D3 D1
– –
Vin
+ + +
D2 RL Vout 0
D4 –

20
MCQ
The forward voltage drop across a silicon diode is
about …………………
(a) 0.3 V
(b) 3 V
(C) 7 V
(d) 0.7 V

21
MCQ
The leakage current in a crystal diode is due to
…………….
(a) minority carriers
(b) majority carriers
(C)junction capacitance
(d) none of the above

22

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