1 / 111

Device Physics

Device Physics. 박 기 찬. Contents. - Energy Band - Carrier Action p-n Junction Metal-Semiconductor Contact - Metal-Insulator-Semiconductor Capacitor - MOSFET. Energy Band. - Atomic bonding and energy band Fermi level and carrier concentration. Atomic Bonding and Energy Band.

Télécharger la présentation

Device Physics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Device Physics 박 기 찬

  2. Contents - Energy Band - Carrier Action • p-n Junction • Metal-Semiconductor Contact - Metal-Insulator-Semiconductor Capacitor - MOSFET

  3. Energy Band - Atomic bonding and energy band • Fermi level and carrier concentration

  4. Atomic Bonding and Energy Band

  5. Periodic Table of Elements

  6. Electronic Energy Levels in Si Atom

  7. sp3 Hybridized Atomic Orbitals s orbital px orbital py orbital pz orbital Tetrahedron sp3 hybrid orbital

  8. Crystal Structures

  9. Energy Band Split

  10. Insulator, Semiconductor, Metal Metal Insulator Semiconductor

  11. Electron Energy in Solid Insulator, Semiconductor Metal EVAC electron affinity ionization potential work function work function EC EF Eg EV

  12. Energy Band and Bond Model T = 0 K T > 0 K For an intrinsic silicon, n = p = ni = 1010 cm-3 @ 300 K

  13. Concept of Hole The movement of a valence electron into the “empty state” is equivalent to the movement of the positively charged “empty state” itself. This is equivalent to a positive charge (“hole”) moving in the valence band.

  14. Temp. Dependence of Bandgap Energy bandgap decreases as temperature rises.

  15. N-Type Doping T = 0 K A substitutional phosphorous atom (donor) with five valence electrons replaces a silicon atom and a negatively charged electron is donated to the lattice in the conduction band. T > 0 K

  16. P-Type Doping T = 0 K A boron atom (acceptor) with three valence electrons substitutes for a silicon atom and an additional electron is accepted to form four covalent bonds around the boron leading to the creation of positively charged hole in the T > 0 K valence band.

  17. Donor vs. Acceptor

  18. Impurity Levels

  19. Fermi Level and Carrier Concentration

  20. Fermi Level Electrons in solids obey Fermi-Dirac statistics. The distribution of electrons over a range of allowed energy levels at thermal equilibrium is governed by the equation, F(E) gives the probability that an available energy state at E is occupied by an electron at absolute temperature T. k is Boltzmann’s constant ( k = 8.6210-5 eV/K = 1.3810-23 J/K ). EF is called the Fermi level. For an energy state at E equal to the Fermi level EF, the occupation probability is 1/2.

  21. Fermi-Dirac Distribution

  22. Carrier Concentration Number of electrons in the conduction band is given by the total number of states multiplied by the occupancy , integrated over the conduction band. > 3 , so Boltzmann statistics apply.

  23. Distribution of Electrons and Holes

  24. Distribution of Electrons and Holes N-type semiconductor P-type semiconductor

  25. Fermi Level Position vs. Doping

  26. Carrier Concentration Number of electrons in the conduction band is determined by the position of with respect to .

  27. Mass Action Law for nondegenerate semiconductor

  28. Intrinsic Carrier Concentration ,

  29. Temperature Dependence of ni

  30. Donor and Acceptor Level

  31. Carrier Conc. vs. Temperature for nondegenerate semiconductor

  32. Fermi Level Position vs. Temp.

  33. Carrier Action - Drift and diffusion • Recombination and generation

  34. Drift and Diffusion

  35. Drift of Carriers Vth = 107 cm/s @ 300K Typical random behavior of a hole in a semiconductor (a) without an electric field and (b) with an electric field.

  36. Drift Velocity Drift velocity of an electron with an applied electric field.

  37. Mobility

  38. Temperature Effect on Mobility Mobility decreases as temperature rises.

  39. Impurity Effect on Mobility

  40. Drift Currents Electrons and hole flow in opposite directions when under the influence of an electric field at different velocities. The drift currents associated with the electrons and holes are in the same direction.

  41. Resistivity conductivity

  42. Resistivity vs. Dopant Concentration

  43. Velocity Saturation in High E-field At low electric fields, . The mobility is independent of the electric field. When the fields are sufficiently large, however, nonlinearities in mobility and, in some cases, saturation of drift velocity are observed. → saturation velocity @ RT:

  44. Band Bending • Carrier kinetic energies • Electron potential energy P.E. of charge Q = QV (c) Electrostatic potential (Voltage)

  45. Diffusion of Carriers

  46. Diffusion of Carriers The flow or flux of carriers proportional to the concentration gradient (Fick’s law). is call the diffusion coefficient. This flux of carriers constitutes a diffusion current, The total conduction current is given by the sum of the drift and diffusion current. Einstein relation

  47. Constancy of Fermi Level In Equilibrium, there are no external influences such as electric field and temperature gradient. Accordingly electrons are evenly distributed and do not move macroscopically. Their distribution is determined by their energy and described by This indicates that the Fermi level is constant in equilibrium. Wheat does “evenly distributed” mean? In thermal equilibrium, what is even in a system? → Temperature!! Regarding the distribution of electrons, “evenly distributed” means that the probability of electron occupation for every state at the same energy level is constant. E1/4 E1/2 = EF E3/4

  48. Einstein Relation These two equations give the relationship and similarly for p-type semiconductor,

  49. Diffusion Length

  50. Recombination and Generation

More Related