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Diodes

The document describes the ideal diode and its i-v characteristics. An ideal diode behaves as a short circuit when forward biased (vD = 0) and an open circuit when reverse biased. It has a circuit symbol of a triangle and its i-v curve passes through the origin and has infinite slope in the forward bias region. In the reverse bias region, the current is zero. The document also provides examples of analyzing diode circuits using Kirchhoff's laws.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
170 views24 pages

Diodes

The document describes the ideal diode and its i-v characteristics. An ideal diode behaves as a short circuit when forward biased (vD = 0) and an open circuit when reverse biased. It has a circuit symbol of a triangle and its i-v curve passes through the origin and has infinite slope in the forward bias region. In the reverse bias region, the current is zero. The document also provides examples of analyzing diode circuits using Kirchhoff's laws.

Uploaded by

s
Copyright
© © 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/ 24

THE IDEAL DIODE

It is a two-terminal device
having the circuit symbol and i-v
characteristic shown in the
following figures (a) & (b).
Forward bias:
vD=0diode behaves like a
short ckt.

Under
the
reverse-biased
situation,
vD<0 iD=0 and the diode
behaves as an open circuit.
Under
the
forward-biased
condition, a positive current is
applied to the ideal diode, vD=0V
appears across it. The ideal diode
behaves as a short circuit in the
forward direction and an open
circuit in the reverse direction.

Fig. The ideal diode (a) diode circuit


symbol; (b) i-v characteristic.

Forward-bias vs Reverse-bias of
an ideal diode

10 0
1k
I D = 10mA
VD = 0
ID =

Forward-bias : VD=0V & ID=

Forward-bias:
VD=0V & ID=VDD/RD
ID = 0
& VD = 10V
Fig. The two modes of operation of ideal diodes
and the use of an external circuit to limit the
forward current and the reverse voltage.

Reverse-bias : ID=0, VD=-VDD

Reverse-bias: ID=0 & VD=-VDD


3

Ex Assuming the diodes to be


ideal, find the value of I and V
in the circuits of the figures
below:

Solution:(A) Refer to the circuit


of Figure(a) and assume both
diodes are conducting. Then,
VD1=VD2=0 ; VB=0, V=0

Using KCL at node B,


I+ID2=(0-(-10))/9.9
I = 0.01 mA
(B) Refer to the circuit in
Figure(b) and assume that both
ideal diodes are conducting.
Then,
VB=0,V=0
Also
ID2=(10-0)/9.9 = 1.01 mA
Applying KCL at node B,
I+ID2=(0-(-10))/10 = 1.0
=>> I=-0.01 mA
This is impossible! Our original
assumption is not correct.

ID2=(10-0)/10k = 1.0 mA
5

Now, assuming D1 is off and


D2 is on, then
ID2=[10-(-10)]/19.9=1.005mA
VB=1.005x10-10
=0.005V
The diode D1 is reverse biased
as assumed and
I=0
V=+0.005 V

Real DIODES
*What is a pn junction diode ?
A pn junction diode is a twoterminal semiconductor device
having circuit symbol of Fig.1.
* The pn junction is produced
by placing a layer of p-type
semiconductor next to a layer of
n-type semiconductor.

The formation of a pn junction is


shown in Fig. 2.
*Barrier
Potentials
junctions :
0.2~0.30 V
0.6~0.70 V

of

pn

( Germanium )
( Silicon )
Free electrons

10

FORWARD BIAS OF A PN
JUNCTION.
*This is one of the two possible
ways to apply an external
voltage source to a pn junction.
The detail is shown in Fig. 3.
*A pn
junction is forward
biased by an external voltage
source which makes its p-type
end more positive than its
ntype end.
A forward-biased junction will
allow current flow through it.

11

12

REVERSE BIAS OF A PN
JUNCTION
* Under this condition, the
external voltage source is
applied to the pn junction as
shown in Figure 4.
*A pn junction is
reverse
biased by an
external voltage
source which makes its p-type
end more negative than its
ntype end.
A reverse-biased pn junction
will have a current of approximately zero through it.
13

14

TERMINAL
CHARACTERISTICS OF
JUNCTION DIODES

The i-v characteristic of a silicon junction diode


iD = I S

vD
nVT
(e

ISe

1)

vD
nVT

Figure 5 shows the i-v characteristic of a silicon junction diode.


It has three distinct regions :
Forward-bias region,
vD > 0

Fig.5 The diode i-v relationship with some


scales expanded and others compressed in
order to reveal details.

* Forward region : vD>0

Reverse-bias region,
-VZK < vD < 0
Breakdown region,
vD < -VZK < 0

15

* Reverse-bias region -VZK<vD<0


* Breakdown region:
vD<-VZK reverse breakdown voltage
iD0

For 0<vD<0.5V
For normal applications
- VZK<vD<0.70V
16

The Forward-Bias Region

n=1 (emission coefficient)

This region of operation is


entered when terminal voltage
vD>0 and the i-v relationship is
described by the Shockley
diode equation

VT=thermal voltage (see Eq(2))

i D = I S (e
ISe

vD
nVT

vD
nVT

1)
... (1)

where
iD=diode current (A)
IS=saturation current (A),
o
doubles in value for every 10 C
rise in temperature, is of the order
of 10-17A for small-signal diodes
17

VT= kT/q

............(2)

where
k = Boltzmann's constant,
1.38x10-23 J/K
T = absolute temperature(kelvin)
q = charge on one electron,
-19
1.602x10 C
o

At room temperature(27 C).


o
VT 26mV at 27 C.
18

For iD >> IS, Eq (1) becomes

iD I S e

vD
nV T

......(3)

or
vD=nVTln(iD/IS)

.....(4)

However, for SIMPLE model


of diode, if assumes vD=0.70V,
irrespective of the current,
1 mA diode: ID=1.0mA, vD=0.70V
1 A diode : ID=1.0A, vD=0.70V

Figure 5 reveals :

iD is negligibly small for


vD<0.5V,the cut-in voltage.

vD varies within 0.6 to 0.8V


for a conducting diode.
Using eqn (4),

1-mA diode: ID=1.0mA, vD=0.65V


1-A diode : ID=1.0A, vD=0.83V

(Check if you can compute this!)


19

The forward iD-vD characteristic


varies with temperature as
shown in Figure 6.
At a given constant iD, vD
decreases
by
approximately
o
2mV for every 1 C increase in
temperature.
vD
2mV/o C
T
20

ID =

Fig. 6 Illustrating the temperature


dependence of the diode forward
characteristics. At a constant current, the
voltage drop decreases by approximately
o
2mV for every 1 C increase in
temperature.

This property can be used to


build a thermometer

21

V DD V D
R

ID ISe

VD
nV T

Fig.8 Graphical analysis of the circuit


in Fig. 7

22

The Reverse-Bias Region


In this region vD is negative
but vD >-VZK. If
|vD|>>VT then Eq(1) becomes:
i D = I S (e

vD
nVT

1)

ANALYSIS OF DIODE
CIRCUITS.
Consider the diode circuit shown
in Figure 7.
The values for ID & VD can be
found by solving Eqs (6) & (7).

For v D << 0
vD
nVT

<< 1
e
iD I S

... (5)

The Breakdown Region


This diode operation is
achieved when the reverse bias
voltage exceeds a threshold
value
(breakdown
voltage)
specific to the particular diode.
This is shown in Figure 5 and
is denoted VZK.
23

For VDD >> 0.5V ,


ID = ISe

VD
nVT

... (6)

By KVL :
V VD
I D = DD
R
Eqs (6) & (7) give :
I D , VD
24

... (7)

Iterative Solution
Solving diode circuit by iteration
method

Fig. 8 Graphical analysis of the circuit in


Fig. 7.

Graphical Analysis
This is done by plotting
Eqs(6) & (7) on the i-v plane as
depicted in Figure 8.
The straight line represents
Eq(7) and is known as load line.
The intersection point of load
line and diode characteristic is
the operating point Q of the
circuit.
25

For D ,
I S = 10 nA
n=2
iD = I S e

vD
2 VT

V D = 2VT ln

26

ID
IS

Solution:
1: Thevenin equivalent circuit
seen by VD

2 : Try VD = 0.70V
then I D

VTH 0.70V
1.06mA
RTH

3 : VD 2 x0.026ln(

1.06mA
) = 0.602V
10nA

6 0.602
= 1.08mA
5
1.08mA
5 : VD 2 x0.026ln(
) = 0.603V
10nA
6 0.603
= 1.079mA
6 : ID
5
1.079mA
7 : VD 0.026 ln(
) = 0.603V
10nA
4 : ID

R TH = R 1 // R 2
= 5.0k
R2
VS
VTH =
R1 + R 2
10
=
X12V
20
= 6.0V

ID =

VTH VD
5.0

VD = 2VT ln(

ID
)
IS

1.06(2) 1.08(4) 1.079(6) 1.079(8) mA

0.70 (1) 0.602(3) 0.603(5) 0.603(7) V


initial guess value for VD

Q-point is: ID = 1.709mA; VD=0.603V


27

28

Analysis of small-signal diode


circuits
Consider the circuit shown in Fig
10(a).

If

vd
<< 1 then
nVT
i D (t ) I D (1 +
i D (t ) I D +

iD(t)

vd (t )
)
nVT

ID
vd (t )
nVT

= I D + g d vd (t )
= I D + id (t )

v D (t ) = V

iD (t ) I S e

+ v D (t )
vD
nV T
V

= ISe
= ISe
= IDe
29

+ vd (t)
nV T

vD
nV T

vd (t )
nV T

vd (t )
nV T

where g d =

ID
nVT

gd is the small-signal conductance


for the diode and
id (t)=gd vd (t)
id(t) is the small-signal diode
current due to the small-signal
voltage, vd (t), across the diode.

30

The magnitude of vd(t) << nVT.


*VDID
iD(t)

VD

vd (t) id (t)

Application of Linear
Superposition in Diode Circuit
Analysis

vd (t) =id (t)rd


id (t) =

or

= gdvd (t)
iD(t)= ID +id (t)
vD(t)=VD +vd (t)

31

vd (t)
rd

32

or
vD=VD+vD
=VD+vd

... (2)

The slope of straight line A-B at


Q-point is
gd =

di D
dv D

ID
nV T

nV T
1
and rd =
=
gd
ID

iD=ID+iD
=ID+id

... (1)

id=gdvd
vd=rdid
rd=1/gd
33

Refer to Fig 10 (pg. 33). If


Superposition
vd(t)<<VT,
Principle can be used to find the
total diode current, iD(t), and total
diode voltage vD(t).
34

(i) The dc values for VD & ID can


be found from the diode's forward
iD-vD curve described by the
equation
iD I S e

vD
nVT

(ii) The ac values for id(t) & vd(t)


can be determined as follows:
If id(t) varies slightly around
the Q-point (see Fig 10-b), i.e.
within the portion AB of diode's
iD-vD curve. This portion of iD-vD
curve approximates a straight
line. Thus, id(t) vd(t), are
linearly related.
The proportional constant is the slope
or the small-signal conductance of the
iD-vD curve at Q-point. From

iD I S e

iD
or vD nVT ln( )
IS
The DC values, I D & VD , is the Q point
35

vD
nV T

I
iD
= S e
v D nV T

vD
nV T

36

gd

iD
vD

v D =VD

1
gd =
ISe
nVT

VD
nVT

ID
gd =
nVT

e.g. For n=1, VT=0.026V or


26mV & ID=1mA
1 x 10 3
gd =
1 x0.026
= 0 . 0385 A

= 38 . 5 mS

id (t ) = g d vd (t )
small-signal conductance of the diode at
the Q-point

gd=slope of the iD-vD curve at


the Q-point
gd is proportional to the dc
current flowing through the diode

37

The small-signal resistance or


incremental resistance, of a diode
at Q-point is the reciprocal of the
small-signal conductance
rd

1
nV
= T
gd
ID

In terms of rd ,
vd (t ) = id (t ) rd

38

EX:
2 AC Analysis
10k

1. DC Analysis

ID =

(10 VD )
10

VD = 0.026 ln(

The small-signal resistance for


the diode at the Q point
determined in (1) is

0.930 ( 2 ) 0.934 ( 4 ) 0.934 ( 6 ) mA

ID
) 0.70(1)
IS

rd =

VT
26 mV
=
= 27 .84
I D 0.934 mA

0.657( 3) 0.657( 5 ) V

The Q-point for the diode circuit


is ID=0.934mA , VD=0.657V.
39

40

vd = (

rd
27.84
)v S = (
)(200mV )
10,000 + 27.84
rd + RD
= 0.555mVP

id =

vd
= 0.020mAp
rd

Diode Rectifiers
A rectifier is a device that
permits current to flow through it
in one direction only.
The half-wave rectifier circuit
using a diode is shown in Fig.11.

vd = 657 + 0.555 sin t mV


id = 0.934 + 0.020 sin t mA

Fig 11. The diode used as a rectifier.


Current flows only during the positive
half-cycle of the point.

41

42

Elementary DC Power Supplies


Most practical electronic circuits
require a dc voltage source that
produces and maintains a constant
voltage. Thus, the pulsating halfsine waves must be converted to a
steady dc level. This is done by
filtering the waveforms. The
purpose in filtering the waveforms
for a dc power supply is to reject all
the ac components.
This can be done by connecting a
capacitor directly across the output
of a half-wave rectifier, the ac
components will "see" a lowimpedance path to ground and will
not therefore appear in the output.

43

Von

V
VP - Von

Fig. 12 Filter capacitor C effectively removes the ac


components from the half-wave-rectified waveform.

Fig. 13. When load resistance RL is connected across the


filter capacitor, the capacitor charges and discharges,
creating a load voltage that has a ripple votlage
superimposed on a dc level.

44

A full-wave bridge rectifier is shown in Fig.14.

Fig.15 demonstrates the current flow in


the full-wave bridge rectifier.

45

Fig. 15. Current flow in the full-wave


bridge rectifier.
46

The peak rectified voltage across


RL is
VPR=EP-1.4V
The full-wave rectified waveform
can be filtered by connecting a
capacitor in parallel with load RL.
This is shown in Fig. 16.

47

48

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