semiconductor
The electrical conductivity of a semiconductor is
semiconductor device
Two basic and common semiconductor devices are:
Diode
the conductivity of a diode is either
transistor
performance model
doping
adding impurities to a semiconductor material to increase number of free electrons or holes
pn junction
n-type material
the conduction band contains a high density of electrons (negative charge), which are the majority charge carriers
p-type material
the valence band contains a high density of holes (positive charge), which are the majority charge carriers
depletion region
diffusion current
drift current
equilibrium
- occurs only with forward bias voltage
bias
the DC voltage applied to a semiconductor junction
zero bias
no externally applied voltage
equilibrium condition: diffusion current creates built- in potential, which creates electric field that opposes diffusion process
forward bias
reverse bias
built in potential of a pn junction, Vo
Vo= (kT/q) ln (Na Nd/ni^2)
Thermal voltage, Vt
Vt= kT/q
Characteristic Curve
a real diode exhibits leakage current, Is, when reverse biased
in reverse bias region, leakage current is small, consisting mainly of drift current
When diode is reverse biased beyond its breakage voltage, Vr (also called Zener voltage, Vz or avalanche voltage), diode renter its breakdown region (also called avalanche region)
Shockley equation
leakage current, Is
- also called saturation current or reverse saturation current
emission coefficient, N
half-wave rectifier
- used in AC-to-DC converters