ECE 305 Homework Week 8: Solutions
ECE 305 Homework Week 8: Solutions
Lundstrom 10/17/2014
1a)
Compute
J D = I D A ,
the
diode
current
density
at
a
forward
bias
of
V A = 0.5
V.
Solution:
Since
this
in
a
one-‐sided
junction
with
N D >> N A
,
essentially
all
of
the
current
is
due
to
electrons
injected
into
the
P-‐region.
JD = q
N A Ln
(
ni2 Dn qVA kBT
e ) ( )
! 1 = J 0 eqVA kBT ! 1
(*)
From
Fig.
3.5
on
p.
80
of
SDF,
µ n = 1248 cm 2 V-s
at
N A = 1016
.
Using
the
Einstein
relation,
we
find
kT
Dn = B µ n = 0.026 ! 1248 = 32.4 cm 2 /s
q
The
diffusion
length
is:
Ln = Dn! n = 32.4 " 10#6 = 57 µm
Putting
in
numbers:
# 10!6 &
V A = 0.026ln % = 0.302 V
V A = 0.302 V
$ 9.1" 10 ('
!12
2b)
If
the
temperature
changes
from
300
K
to
301
K,
how
much
does
V A
change?
Solution:
Differentiate
the
expression
that
we
obtained
above:
d ') k BT ! J D $ +) k B ! J D $ k BT J 0 d
dV A
dT
= (
dT *) q
ln # & , = ln # & +
" J 0 % -) q " J 0 % q J D dT
( )
J D J 0`.1
dV A k B ! J D $ k BT ! 1 dJ 0 $
= ln # & '
dT q "J %
0
q #" J dT &%
0
dJ 0 d ! n Dn $ 2
= q
i
dT dT #" N A Ln &%
The
strongest
part
of
the
temperature-‐dependence
comes
from
the
exponential
factor
in
ni2 ,
so
we
can
ignore
the
temperature
dependence
of
the
diffusion
coefficient,
the
diffusion
length,
and
the
effective
densities-‐of-‐states
and
write:
3a)
Is
the
diode
forward
or
reverse
biased?
Explain
your
answer.
Solution:
Forward
biased
because
there
are
excess
electrons
on
the
P-‐side
and
excess
holes
on
the
N-‐side.
3b)
What
is
the
acceptor
concentration
on
the
P-‐side?
Solution:
N A = 1016 cm -3
3c)
What
is
the
donor
concentration
on
the
N-‐side?
Solution:
N D = 1014 cm -3
3d)
What
is
the
intrinsic
carrier
concentration?
Solution:
n0 p0 = ni2
On
the
P-‐side:
n0 p0 = 1016 ! 107 = 1023
ni = 1023 = 3.16 ! 1011 cm -3
On
the
N-‐side:
n0 p0 = 1014 ! 109 = 1023
ni = 1023 = 3.16 ! 1011 cm -3
ni = 3.16 ! 1011 cm -3
( )
On
the
N-‐side:
!p x p = 1012 << n0 = 1014
3f)
What
bias
(in
volts)
is
applied
to
the
diode?
Solution:
According
the
the
law
of
the
junction:
ni2 qVA kBT
!n ( "xn ) = e = n p0 eqVA kBT
NA
k BT !n ( "xn ) # 1010 &
VA = ln = 0.026ln % 7 ( = 0.18 V
q n p0 $ 10 '
V A = 0.18 V
3g)
Which
is
longer:
the
electron
diffusion
length
on
the
P-‐side
of
the
junction
or
the
hole
diffusion
length
on
the
N-‐side
of
the
junction.
Solution:
The
electron
diffusion
length
on
the
P-‐side.
(The
diffusion
length
is
the
distance
it
takes
for
the
minority
carrier
concentration
to
return
to
its
value
in
the
bulk.
4) This
problem
concerns
the
energy
band
diagram
shown
below
for
a
diode
under
bias.
Note:
The
lifetime
is
longer,
so
the
current
must
be
smaller
–
this
is
a
sanity
check.
Key
point
to
remember:
Long
base
diode:
L >> Ln
JD = q
N A Ln
(
ni2 Dn qVA kBT
e !1 )
Short
base
diode,
L << Ln ,
replace
the
diffusion
length
by
the
length
of
the
quasi-‐
neutral
region.
n2 D
(
J D = q i n eqVA kBT ! 1
NA L
)
If
the
diode
is
neither
long
nor
short,
then
we
get
more
complicated
expressions
involving
hyperbolic
functions.