Basic Electronics Lecture 1
Basic Electronics Lecture 1
Basic Electronics
Slide 1- 2
Readings
• TEXTBOOK
[1] Basic Electronics by B.L Tharaja
[2] Basic Electronics By Floyd
• REFERENCES
[1]Course Outline,Paper Pattern and Past Papers may obtain from
Bookshop.
Slide 1- 3
Class Format
• Presentation by myself
Slide 1- 4
Class Rules
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Class Rules
• You can bring anything to drink but
NO FOOD PLEASE
Slide 1- 7
What is
Basic Electronics?
Electronics
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Aims for this lecture
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Lecture Outline
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Semiconductors
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Periodic Table and Groups
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Conductors
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http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_3/chpt_2/3.html
Insulators
• Group VIIA elements: Fl, Cl, Br, and I all have 7 electrons in
the outer shell. These elements readily accept an electron to fill
up the outer shell with a full 8 electrons. (Figure below) If
these elements do accept an electron, a negative ion is formed
from the neutral atom. These elements which do not give up
electrons are insulators.
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Noble (Inert) Gases
• Group VIIIA elements: He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe all have 8 electrons in the
valence shell. (Figure below) That is, the valence shell is complete meaning
these elements neither donate nor accept electrons. Nor do they readily
participate in chemical reactions since group VIIIA elements do not easily
combine with other elements. These elements are good electrical insulators
and are gases at room temperature.
• Group VIIIA elements: He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe are largely unreactive since the
valence shell is complete.
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Semiconductors
• Group IVA elements: C, Si, Ge, having 4 electrons in the valence shell,
form compounds by sharing electrons with other elements without forming
ions. This shared electron bonding is known as covalent bonding. Note that
the center atom (and the others by extension) has completed its valence
shell by sharing electrons. Note that the figure is a 2-d representation of
bonding, which is actually 3-d. It is this group, IVA, that we are interested
in for its semiconducting properties.
• (a) Group IVA elements: C, Si, Ge having 4 electrons in the valence shell,
(b) complete the valence shell by sharing electrons with other elements.
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Energy Bands in Conductors
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Dopants in Semiconductors
• The crystal lattice contains atoms having four electrons in the outer shell, forming four covalent bonds to
adjacent atoms.
• The addition of a phosphorus atom with five electrons in the outer shell introduces an extra electron into the
lattice as compared with the silicon atom.
• The impurity forms four covalent bonds to four silicon atoms with four of the five electrons, fitting into the
lattice with one electron left over.
• The spare electron is not strongly bonded to the lattice as the electrons of normal Si atoms are. It is free to
move about the crystal lattice.
• Application of an external electric field produces strong conduction in the doped semiconductor in the
conduction band. Heavier doping levels produce stronger conduction.
• Thus, a poorly conducting intrinsic semiconductor has been converted into a good electrical conductor.
• (a) Outer shell electron configuration of donor N-type Phosphorus, Silicon (for reference), and acceptor P-
type Boron. (b) N-type donor impurity creates free electron (c) P-type acceptor impurity creates hole, a
positive charge carrier.
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Periodic Table and Detector Material
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PN Junction
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N-type
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P-type
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Conduction in p/n-type Semiconductors
• In n-type material, excess electrons move freely in an electric field.
• In p-type material, holes migrate as electrons move in an electric field.
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Migration of Electrons and Holes
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pn Junction and Biasing
• A pn junction is a sandwich of p-type
and n-type material.
• A depletion region (free of excess
charge) forms.
• An intrinsic (built-in) electric field
exists in this region.
• An external bias can increase or
decrease the width of the depletion
region and the voltage difference
between the p and n regions.
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Carrier Densities
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PN Junction: IV Characteristics
• Current-Voltage Relationship
eV / kT
I I o [e 1]
• Forward Bias: current exponentially increases.
• Reverse Bias: low leakage current equal to ~Io.
• Ability of p-n junction to pass current in only one direction is known as “rectifying” behavior.
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pn Junction Review
• PN junctions are fabricated in a monocrystalline piece of semiconductor with both a
P-type and N-type region in proximity at a junction.
• The transfer of electrons from the N side of the junction to holes annihilated on the
P side of the junction produces a built-in voltage. This is usually 0.6 V to 0.7 V in
silicon, and varies depending on material and dopant concentration.
• Forward bias requires a positive voltage to be applied to the p-side with respect to
the n-side. Reverse bias requires a positive voltage to be applied to the n-side with
respect to the p-side.
• A forward biased PN junction conducts a current once the built-in voltage is
overcome (the diode will “turn on”). The external applied potential accelerates
majority carriers across the junction where recombination takes place, allowing
current flow.
• A reverse biased PN junction conducts almost no current. The applied reverse bias
adds to the built-in potential barrier, impeding current flow. It also increases the
thickness of the non-conducting depletion region.
• Reverse biased PN junctions show a temperature dependent reverse leakage current.
This is less than a µA in small silicon diodes.
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Diode
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Definition of a Diode
• A diode is an electronic component that
– has two terminals,
– limits current to one direction, and
– has nonlinear (non-Ohmic) behavior.
• Diodes are p-n junctions that “turn on” at a specific voltage.
• Diodes have an anode (p-side) and a cathode (n-side).
• Positive current normally flows from the anode to the cathode.
• Diodes are useful for protecting circuitry from harmful voltage
or current.
• Diodes are a basic building block of the charge-collecting
element in many detectors.
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Photodiode
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Definition of a Photodiode
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Response of Photodiode to Light
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Avalanche Photodiode
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PIN Photodiode
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Band Gaps
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Light-Emitting Diode
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Definition of a Light Emitting Diode (LED)
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LED Cutaway
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LED Animation
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LED Construction
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Visible LED
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1907 Publication report on Curious Phenomenon
On applying a potential to
a crystal of carborundum
(SiC), the material gave
out a yellowish light
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Definition of a Transistor
• A transistor controls current through a circuit via an injected
current, i.e. it behaves like a current-controlled resistor.
• A Bipolar Junction Transistor has three terminals:
– Base (B): the control
– Collector (C): the source of the current
– Emitter (E): the destination of the current
iC Circuit Symbol
-
vBC collector n
+
base p
+ iB
vBE - emitter n
iE
Schematics shown are for an npn BJT, but pnp BJTs also exist.
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BJT Transistor Operation
• NPN BJT has three layers with an emitter and collector at the
ends, and a very thin base in between (Figure a).
• Base-collector is reverse biased, increasing the width of the
associated depletion region (Figure b).
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Transistor in Operation
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Transistor: Water Flow Model
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Transistor Architecture
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Transistor Architecture (NPN vs. PNP)
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Common Transistor Packages
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Historical Prediction of Transistor Effect
• Effect predicted as early as 1925
by Julius Lilienfeld (“Field
Effect”)
• Patent issued in the 1926 and
1933
• Technology at the time was not
sufficiently advanced to produce
doped crystals with enough
precision for the effect to be seen
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“Invention” of Transistor
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Now for the rub!
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Transistor Invention History Epilogue
• The three argued over patents and the team split up.
• Schockley founded Silicon Valley in 1956 with money from
his buddy Beckman. He eventually left physics to pursue
genetics research. He was mad that everyone made money but
him. (His early co-workers got fed up and started Fairchild,
and then Intel).
• Bardeen went to the University of Illinois. In 1957, along with
post-doctoral student Leon Cooper and graduate student Bob
Schrieffer, he developed the first theory on superconductivity.
To this day, this theory is known as the BCS theory (for
Bardeen, Cooper, and Schrieffer)
• Brattain stayed at Bell Labs until he retired and then taught
Physics at Whitman College.
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Evolution of the Transistor
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Field Effect Transistor
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Definition of a FET
• The field-effect transistor (FET) is a generic term for a device that controls
current through a circuit via an applied voltage, i.e. it behaves like a
voltage-controlled resistor.
• There are two main varieties of FETs:
– junction FETs (JFETs)
– metal-oxide-semicondutor FETs (MOSFETs)
• A FET has three terminals:
– gate (G): as in the “gate” keeper of the current
– source (S): the source of the electrons
– drain (D): the destination of the electrons
JFET (n-channel) MOSFET (NMOS)
vS vG vD vS vD
vG metal
n+ p+ n+ n+ n+ oxide
n
p+ p
vG 68
FET Operation
• The FET operation is as follows:
– apply a voltage to the gate
– this voltage sets up an electric field in the “body” of the device
– electric field inhibits/supports the flow of charge from source to drain
• FETs can be made in n-channel or p-channel variety.
• FETs are “Unipolar” (conduct either electrons or holes, not both).
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Junction Field-Effect Transistor (JFET)
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JFET Architecture
• An n-channel JFET is composed of:
– n-type body
– p-type gate
• Gate is generally reverse biased to control current flow.
• Channel conducts regardless of polarity between source and drain.
• Typical output transimpedance for a JFET is a few hundred Ohms.
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JFET Architecture
N-channel JFET: (a) Depletion at gate diode. (b) Reverse biased gate diode increases depletion region. (c) Increasing
reverse bias enlarges depletion region. (d) Increasing reverse bias pinches-off the S-D channel.
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JFET Architecture
Junction field effect transistor: (a) Discrete device cross-section, (b) schematic
symbol, (c) integrated circuit device cross-section.
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JFET Characteristic Curve
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JFET 3D Characteristic Curve
source
gate
drain
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Advantages of JFET
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Operating a JFET
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JFET Review
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Metal-Oxide Field-Effect Transistor
(MOSFET)
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Definition of Metal-Oxide FET (MOSFET)
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MOSFET Architecture
• The MOSFET gate is a metallic or polysilicon layer atop a silicon dioxide
insulator. The gate bears a resemblance to a metal oxide
semiconductor (MOS) capacitor.
• When charged, the plates of the capacitor take on the charge polarity of the
respective battery terminals. The lower plate is P-type silicon from which
electrons are repelled by the negative (-) battery terminal toward the oxide,
and attracted by the positive (+) top plate.
• This excess of electrons near the oxide creates an inverted (excess of
electrons) channel under the oxide. This channel is also accompanied by a
depletion region isolating the channel from the bulk silicon substrate.
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N-channel MOSFET (enhancement type): (a) 0 V gate bias, (b) positive gate bias.
MOSFET Review
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JFET versus MOSFET
• The MOSFET has the advantage of extremely low gate current because of
the insulating oxide between the gate and channel.
• JFET has higher transconductance than the MOSFET.
• JFET has low noise at low frequency.
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