Lecture 6
Lecture 6
Principles of
Semiconductor Device Design
Lecture 6:
Metal-Semiconductor Contacts (continued)
pn Junction Diodes
Sam Emaminejad
Course Overview
1. Semiconductor Properties
2. Metal-Semiconductor Contacts
3. P-N Junction
4. MOS Devices
5. Bipolar Junction Transistor
Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (MOS)
Field-Effect Transistor (FET)
http://qph.is.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-38a99b4f215e161bf31964795cfce7d2?convert_to_webp=true
Lecture 6
OUTLINE
• Metal-Semiconductor Contacts (cont’d)
• pn Junction Diodes
– Electrostatics (step junction)
Reading: Pierret 14.2-14.3, 5; Hu 4.17-4.21, 4.1-4.2
Recall: FM > FS, n-type
• Poisson’s equation: r qN D E
=
x s s
𝑞𝑁𝐷 𝑞𝑁𝐷 +++
E 𝑥 =න 𝑑𝑥 = 𝐴𝑥 + 𝐵 = 𝑥+𝐵
𝜀𝑠 𝜀𝑠 𝑑E 𝑞𝑁𝐷
slope = 𝐴 = =
𝑑𝑥 𝜀𝑠
Boundary condition:
𝑞𝑁𝐷 𝑞𝑁𝐷
E 𝑊 =0→E 𝑊 = 𝑊+𝐵 =0→𝐵 =− 𝑊
𝜀𝑠 𝜀𝑠
• The solution is: (x ) = − qN (W − x )
D
𝑑𝑉 𝑑E 𝑞𝑁𝐷
E=− slope = =
𝑑𝑥 𝜀𝑠
𝑑𝑥
V ( x ) = − ( x)dx
𝑞𝑁𝐷 Choose
=න 𝑊 − 𝑥 𝑑𝑥 𝑉 𝑥=𝑊 =0
𝜀𝑠
𝑞𝑁𝐷 2
=− 𝑊−𝑥
2𝜀𝑠
− qN D
V (x ) = (W − x )2
2K S 0
2 sVbi 𝑑E
W= Slope =
𝑑𝑥
qN D =𝜀 =
𝜌 𝑞𝑁𝐷
𝑠 𝜀𝑠
− qN D
V (x ) = (W − x )2
2K S 0
At x = 0, V = - (Vbi - VA)
2 s (Vbi − VA )
W= Slope ∝ 𝑁𝐷
qN D
C 2
qN D s A2 Reverse Vbi VA
bias
Junction
P-side N-side
1
𝑉 = (𝐸𝑟𝑒𝑓 − 𝐸𝑐 )
𝑞
Electrostatic potential:
𝑑𝑉
Electric field: E=−
𝑑𝑥 𝑠𝑙𝑜𝑝𝑒 ∝ 𝜌 < 0 𝑠𝑙𝑜𝑝𝑒 ∝ 𝜌 > 0
𝑑E 𝜌
=
𝑑𝑥 𝜀𝑠 𝑞𝑁𝐷
−𝑞𝑁𝐴
𝐸𝑖 − 𝐸𝐹 p-side
𝐸𝐹 − 𝐸𝑖 n-side
E𝐺 𝑁𝐷 E𝐺 𝑁A
𝑞𝑉𝑏𝑖 = + 𝑘𝑇𝑙𝑛 𝑞𝑉𝑏𝑖 = + 𝑘𝑇𝑙𝑛
2 𝑛𝑖 2 𝑛𝑖
The Depletion Approximation
R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Fundamentals, Figure 5.6
( x) = − qN
A
x + C1 = −
qN A
s
(x + x )
p
s
@𝑥 = −𝑥𝑝 , E = 0
In the depletion region
on the n side, r = qND
𝑑E 𝑞𝑁𝐷
Poisson’s Eq’n: =
𝑑𝑥 𝜀𝑠
( x) = qN D
x + C1 =
qN D
s
( x − xn )
s
@𝑥 = 𝑥𝑛 , E = 0
Electric Field Distribution
E(x)
-xp xn
x
𝑑E −𝑞𝑁𝐴 𝑑E 𝑞𝑁𝐷
𝑠𝑙𝑜𝑝𝑒 = = <0 𝑠𝑙𝑜𝑝𝑒 = = >0
𝑑𝑥 𝜀𝑠 𝑑𝑥 𝜀𝑠
𝑞𝑁𝐴 𝑞𝑁𝐷
E(𝑥) = − 𝑥 + 𝑥𝑝 E(𝑥) = 𝑥 − 𝑥𝑛
𝜀𝑠 𝜀𝑠
0 𝑉
qN A
V ( x) = ( x + x p ) 2 + D1
2 s 𝑉𝑏𝑖
If 𝑉 = 0, @ 𝑥 = −𝑥𝑝
Choose V(-xp) to be 0 0
−𝑥𝑝 𝑥𝑛 𝑥
V(xn) = Vbi
𝑞𝑁𝐷 𝑑𝑉
On the n side: E(𝑥) =
𝜀𝑠
𝑥 − 𝑥𝑛 E=−
𝑑𝑥
𝑉𝑏𝑖
qN D qN D
V ( x) = − ( xn − x ) + D2 = Vbi −
2
( xn − x )2
2 s 2 s
𝑉 = 𝑉𝑏𝑖 , @ 𝑥 = 𝑥𝑛
Derivation of Depletion Width
• At x = 0, expressions for p side and n side must be equal:
− 𝑞𝑁𝐴 + 𝑞𝑁𝐷
𝑉(𝑥 = 0 ) = (0 + 𝑥𝑝 )2 𝑉(𝑥 = 0 ) = 𝑉𝑏𝑖 − (𝑥𝑛 − 0)2
2𝜀𝑠 2𝜀𝑠
𝑞𝑁𝐴 2 𝑞𝑁𝐷 2
𝑥 = 𝑉𝑏𝑖 − 𝑥
2𝜀𝑠 𝑝 2𝜀𝑠 𝑛
𝑁𝐷 𝑁𝐴
→𝑥𝑝 = 𝑥 𝑜𝑟 𝑥𝑛 = 𝑥
𝑁𝐴 𝑛 𝑁𝐷 𝑝
Depletion Width
• Eliminating xp, we have:
2 sVbi NA
xn =
q ND (N A + ND )
2 sVbi ND
xp =
q N A(N A + ND )
• Summing, we have:
2 sVbi 1 1
xn + x p = W = +
q N A ND
Depletion Width in a One-Sided Junction
2 sVbi 1 1
xn + x p = W = +
q N A ND
1 1 1
If NA >> ND as in a p+n junction: + ≅
𝑁𝐴 𝑁𝐷 𝑁𝐷
2 sVbi
W= xn
qN D
x p = xn N D N A 0
1 1 1 2𝜀𝑠 𝑉𝑏𝑖
What about a n+p junction? + ≅ 𝑊= ≅ 𝑥𝑝
𝑁𝐴 𝑁𝐷 𝑁𝐴 𝑞𝑁𝐴
𝑁𝐷 ≫ 𝑁𝐴
1 1 1 1
W = 2 s Vbi qN where = +
N N D N A lighter dopant density
Peak E-Field in a One-Sided Junction
dx = (0) W = Vbi
1 Example: p+n junction
𝜀
2 𝑥𝑛
𝑥𝑝 ≅ 0
𝑥
2 s
W Vbi 𝑎𝑟𝑒𝑎 = 𝑉𝑏𝑖
E(0)
qN
(0) =
2Vbi
W
2qNVbi
s
V(x) in a One-Sided Junction
p side n side
qN A qN D
V ( x) = ( x + x p )2 V ( x) = Vbi − ( xn − x ) 2
2 s 2 s
ND
V (0) = Vbi Most of voltage is dropped across
N A + ND the more lightly doped side
P+ 𝑉(𝑥) N P 𝑉(𝑥) N+
𝑉𝑏𝑖 𝑉𝑏𝑖
𝑉(0) ≅ 0
𝑥 𝑥
𝑥𝑛 −𝑥𝑝
𝜀𝑠 ≅ 10−12 𝐹/𝑐𝑚
Example: One-Sided pn Junction
A p+n junction has NA=1020 cm-3 and ND =1017cm-3.
Find (a) Vbi (b) W (c) xn and (d) xp .
EG kT N D
Vbi = + ln ≅ 0.56 + 0.42 = 0.98 𝑉 ~ 1 𝑉
2q q ni
2 sVbi 2 × 10−12
W =[ ]1/2 ≅ 10−5 𝑐𝑚 = 0.1𝜇𝑚
qN D 1.6 × 10−19 × 1017
xn W ≅ 0.1𝜇𝑚
x p = xn N D N A ≅ 1Å ≅ 0
Voltage Drop across a pn Junction
R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Fundamentals, Figure 5.10
𝑞(𝑉𝑏𝑖 - 𝑉𝐴 )
𝑞𝑉𝐴
𝑞(𝑉𝑏𝑖 - 𝑉𝐴 ) 2 s 1 1
W= (Vbi − VA ) +
q N A ND
|𝑞𝑉𝐴 |