1 Semiconductor Diodes

27
1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 1 of 27 1.2 Ideal Diode I D V D I D Open Circuit Short Circuit V D + -

Transcript of 1 Semiconductor Diodes

Page 1: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 1 of 27 1.2 Ideal Diode

ID

VD

ID

Open Circuit

Short CircuitVD

+ -

Page 2: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 2 of 27 1.3 Semiconductor Materials Conductor Insulator Semiconductor

R = (Resistivity, ρ ohm-cm) * (Length, L cm) / (Area, cm2) = RA/L R = (50,000 ohm-cm)(4 cm)/(2cm x 4cm) = 25,000 ohms Resistivity of a semiconductor decreases as temperature increases.

ure coefficient. Negative temperat

Page 3: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 3 of 27 Ge and Si single-crystal structure

Atomic structure: (a) germanium; (b) silicon.

Page 4: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 4 of 27 Energy Levels

Page 5: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 5 of 27

W = QV joules Q = 1.6 x 10-19 coulomb (1 electron worth of charge)(1V) = 1.6 x 10-19 Joule (1.6 x 10-19 coulomb)(1V) = 1.6 x 10-19 Joule 3 electrons and 2 volts 3 electrons have a charge = 4.8(10-19) comlomb 4.8(10-19 coulomb)(2 volts) = 9.6(10-19) Joule or 6eV

Page 6: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 6 of 27 1.5 Extrinsic Materials – doped

Page 7: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 7 of 27 (a) n-type material; (b) p-type material.

Page 8: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 8 of 27 1.6 Semiconductor Diode p-n junction with no external bias

Carriers combine, resulting in depletion region

Page 9: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 9 of 27 Reverse-biased p-n junction.

electrons holes

Page 10: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 10 of 27 Forward-biased p-n junction.

electronsholes

Page 11: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 11 of 27 Silicon semiconductor diode characteristics.

Page 12: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 12 of 27 ID = Is(ekV/T – 1) k constant, 11,600/η η= 1 for Ge and 2 for Si V diode forward voltage T temperature in Kelvin, 273o + temp in centigrade Example: Si, voltage = 0.7, k=5800, Is = -25nA

k 5800

K 273

TA 20

TK K TA

Is 25 10 9.

VD 0.7

ID Is ek

VDTK.

1. .02605004764852208305

Page 13: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 13 of 27

Peak Inverse Voltage - usually >50 volts

Tempers for every10o C increase in temperr every10o C increase in temperature

V_V1

-6.0V -5.0V -4.0V -3.0V -2.0V -1.0V -0.0V 1.0VI(D1)

-20mA

-10mA

0A

10mA

20mA

Zener region VT = 0.7 Si

ature effects

Current double ature VT decreases 2mv for every1o C VT decreases 2mv for every1o C

Page 14: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 14 of 27 1.8 Resistance Levels Diode I-V characteristic

DC Resistance

RD = VD / ID

V_V1

0V 0.5V 1.0V 1.5V 2.0V 2.5V 3.0V 3.5V 4.0V 4.5V 5.0VI(D1)

0A

10mA

20mA

30mA

Q-point Quiescent point Operating point

1V/15mA = 0.0667*1000 66.7

Page 15: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 15 of 27 AC or Dynamic Resistance

RD = ∆Vd / ∆Id

V_V1

0V 0.5V 1.0V 1.5V 2.0V 2.5V 3.0V 3.5V 4.0V 4.5V 5.0VI(D1)

0A

10mA

20mA

30mA

Q-point Quiescent point Operating point

for example at 25mA in Fig. 1.34 on page 22, RD = ∆Vd / ∆Id = (0.8V – 0.78V)/(30mA – 20mA) = 2 ohms

Page 16: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 16 of 27 Using calculus we get approx,

1/rD = dI/dV = d/dV (Is(ekV/T – 1) = Is (k/T) ekV/T

= (k/T) Is ekV/T

which is almost

1/rD = kID / T at room temp 25oC rd = 26mv / ID at 15mA, rd = 26mv / 15mA 1.733 ohms

rd’ = (26mv / ID) + rB , add diode body resistance

Page 17: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 17 of 27 Average AC resistance

Page 18: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 18 of 27 1.9 Diode Equivalent Circuits Piecewise-Linear Equivalent Circuit

Page 19: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 19 of 27

deal diode and its characteristics.

Simplified equivalent circuit for the silicon semiconductor diode.

I

Page 20: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 20 of 27 1.10 Diode Specification Sheets

Page 21: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 21 of 27 1.11 Transition and Diffusion Capacitance Reverse bias – capacitance of depletion region. CT Forward bias – excess charge injected into regions just outside the depletion region, CD.

1.12 Reverse Recovery Time Diffusion capacitance (charge stored). Reversing the bias sweeps the stored charge out.

Page 22: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 22 of 27 FIGURE 1-42 Transition and diffusion capacitance versus applied bias for a silicon diode.

At V = 0.25 the CD = 9pF At V = -15 the CT = 1pF

Page 23: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 23 of 27 1.13 Semiconductor Diode Notation 1.14 Diode Testing 1.15 Zener Diodes Conduction direction: (a) Zener diode; (b) semiconductor diode.

Page 24: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 24 of 27

Page 25: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 25 of 27 1.16 Light Emitting Diodes

(a) Process of electroluminescence in the LED; (b) graphic symbol.

Page 26: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 26 of 27

Page 27: 1 Semiconductor Diodes

1.0. Semiconductor Diodes 27 of 27 1.17 Diode Arrays – Integrated Circuits 1.18 Summary 1.19 Computer Analysis