Title: OUTLINE
1Lecture 14
- OUTLINE
- pn Junction Diodes (contd)
- Transient response turn-on
- Summary of important concepts
- Diode applications
- Varactor diodes
- Tunnel diodes
- Optoelectronic diodes
- Reading Pierret 9 Hu 4.12-4.15
2Turn-On Transient
- Consider a pn diode (Qp gtgt Qn)
i(t)
Dpn(x)
t
vA(t)
x
xn
t
For t gt 0
Lecture 14, Slide 2
EE130/230A Fall 2013
3- By separation of variables and integration, we
have - If we assume that the build-up of stored charge
occurs quasi-statically so that - then
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
4- If tp is large, then the time required to turn on
the diode is approximately DQ/IF -
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
5Summary of Important Concepts
- Under forward bias, minority carriers are
injected into the quasi-neutral regions of the
diode. - The current flowing across the junction is
comprised of hole and electron components. - If the junction is asymmetrically doped (i.e. it
is one-sided) then one of these components will
be dominant. - In a long-base diode, the injected minority
carriers recombine with majority carriers within
the quasi-neutral regions.
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
6- The ideal diode equation stipulates the
relationship between JN(-xp) and JP(xn) - For example, if holes are forced to flow across a
forward-biased junction, then electrons must also
be injected across the junction.
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
7- Under reverse bias, minority carriers are
collected into the quasi-neutral regions of the
diode. - Minority carriers generated within a diffusion
length of the depletion region diffuse into the
depletion region and then are swept across the
junction by the electric field. - The negative current flowing in a reverse-biased
diode depends on the rate at which minority
carriers are supplied from the quasi-neutral
regions. - Electron-hole pair generation within the
depletion region also contributes negative diode
current.
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
8pn Junction as a Temperature Sensor
C. C. Hu, Modern Semiconductor Devices for ICs,
Figure 4-21
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
9Varactor Diode
- Voltage-controlled capacitance
- Used in oscillators and detectors
- (e.g. FM demodulation circuits in your radios)
- Response changes by tailoring doping profile
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
10Optoelectronic Diodes
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Fundamentals, Figure
9.2
11Open Circuit Voltage, VOC
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
C. C. Hu, Modern Semiconductor Devices for ICs,
Figure 4-25(b)
12Solar Cell StructureCyferz at en.wikipedia
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
13Textured Si surface for reduced reflectance
- Achieved by anisotropic wet etching (e.g. in KOH)
M. A. Green et al., IEEE Trans. Electron Devices,
Vol. 37, pp. 331-336, 1990
P. Papet et al., Solar Energy Materials and Solar
Cells, Vol. 90, p. 2319, 2006
EE130/230A Fall 2013
Lecture 14, Slide 13
14p-i-n Photodiodes
- W ? Wi-region, so most carriers are generated in
the depletion region - ? faster response time (10 GHz operation)
- Operate near avalanche to amplify signal
R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Fundamentals, Figure
9.5
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
15Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs)
- LEDs are made with compound semiconductors
(direct bandgap)
R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Fundamentals, Figure
9.13
R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Fundamentals, Figure
9.15
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EE130/230A Fall 2013
16- Question 1 (re Slide 12) Why are the contacts
to the back (non-illuminated) side of a solar
cell made only at certain points (rather than
across the entire back surface)? - Answer To increase energy conversion efficiency
- The absorption depth (average distance a photon
travels before transferring its energy to an
electron) for long-wavelength photons is greater
than the Si thickness. - ? The bottom surface oxide and metal layer
effectively form a mirror that reflects light
back into the silicon. - There is more recombination in heavily doped
contacts than at a good Si/SiO2 interface most
of the back surface should be covered by SiO2 so
that generated carriers have a high probability
of diffusing to the depletion region before they
recombine.
EE130/230A Fall 2013
Lecture 14, Slide 16
17- Question 2 (re Slide 15) What limits the
lifetime of an LED? - Answer
- LED lifetime is defined to be the duration of
operation after which the light output falls to
only 70 of original. - (Even afterwards, the LED will continue to
function.) - The power density of an LED can be high (up to 10
W/cm2, comparable to an electric stove top),
causing significant heating which can degrade the
light output through various mechanisms - Degradation of epoxy package causing partial
absorption of light - Mechanical stress weakening the wire bond
(electrical connection) - Formation/growth of crystalline defects, or
diffusion of metal into the semiconductor,
resulting in increased recombination via mid-gap
states
EE130/230A Fall 2013
Lecture 14, Slide 17