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Lecture 10-1 Reverse Biased Capacitance The charge at the p-n junction, q j , changes with applied voltage The depletion region is “sort of” like a parallel plate capacitor anode cathode + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + + + + + _ _ _ _ _ - V o +V + -V Because the depletion region changes with applied voltage, (roughly speaking) the distance between +q and -q changes, hence capacitance changes Does C j increase or decrease with negative applied voltage? C j dq j dV -------- =

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Page 1: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-1

Reverse Biased Capacitance

• The charge at the p-n junction, qj, changes with applied voltage

• The depletion region is “sort of” like a parallel plate capacitor

anode cathode

+ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + +

- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -

+++++

_____

- Vo+V +

-V

• Because the depletion region changes with applied voltage, (roughly speaking) the distance between +q and -q changes, hence capacitance changes

• Does Cj increase or decrease with negative applied voltage?

Cj

dqjdV--------=

Page 2: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-2

Reverse Biased Capacitance

• What does this capacitance represent?

Cj

dqjdV--------=

V

q j at some voltage bias point

• How can we tell from this voltage vs. charge plot that the capacitance is a nonlinear function of the applied voltage?

Page 3: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-3

Depletion Capacitance

CjK

Vo VD–( )m------------------------------=

• Vo is the built-in voltage

• Applied only for negative external voltage, VD.

• K is a constant that is a function of the Si doping, etc.

• m is a constant that depends on how the junction was formed (how the impurities were added) --- varies between 1/3 and 1/2 for Si diodes

Often called Junction Capacitance

Page 4: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-4

Positive Applied Voltage

• A positive external voltage will reduce the barrier and allow more carriers to diffuse

• The depletion region width is also reduced

anode cathode

+ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + +

- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -

+++++

_____

- Vo-V +

0 < V < Vo

• Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

I = ID - IS

Page 5: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-5

Positive Applied Voltage

• With a lower potential barrier, more free carriers are able to diffuse

anode cathode

+ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + ++ + + + + + +

- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -

+++++

_____

- Vo-V +

0 < V < Vo

npo pno equilibrium value

excesscarriers

I

Page 6: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-6

Positive Applied Voltage - p n diode

• The lower doped region is sometimes called “the base”.

• For the asymmetrical doping of p and n regions the minority carrier concentrations in both regions differ. The excess carrier concentrations will differ as well.

• ∆pn >> ∆np Why?

npo equilibrium value

pno

∆pn

p+ n

∆np

+

Page 7: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-7

Positive Applied Voltage

• At steady state for V>0, the excess carrier distributions correspond to diffusion currents that comprise the external diode current, I

• Excess carriers decay exponentially with distance (due to recombination), therefore the minority carrier distributions are exponential

• The minority carrier injection at the edge of the depletion region increases exponentially with increasing voltage

pno equilibrium value

Ip

∆pn 0( ) ev∝• The total excess charge, Qp,

is directly proportional to ev

because it varies exponentially with distance

minority hole concentration

Page 8: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-8

Forward Bias - “Recombination Current”• Diffusion current within the neutral region is bigger closer to the depletion layer

where the gradient is bigger. What about current continuity?

• The charge transport through the forward biased diode can be attributed to acts of recombination!

• Minority holes injected into the n region attract electrons from the contact. The electron-hole pairs diffuse according to the hole gradient until the pair recombines. In equilibrium, each time such a recombination occurs, a new hole is injected. Thus, the each act of recombination corresponds to an act of transport of an elementary charge. Similar thing happens at the p side of the junction... (at low current levels, recombination in the depletion region is also an important mechanism contributing to the overall current).

Total currentJ

X

currentdensity

“recombination”electroncurrent

hole current

density

depletionregion

metalcontact

xn

J

X

xn

+ - +++++

-----

Page 9: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-9

Reverse Bias - “Generation Current”• Diffusion current within the neutral region is bigger closer to the depletion

layer where the gradient is bigger.

• In equilibrium, each time generation occurs, a new electron-hole pair starts diffusing towards the depletion region. At xn, the pair is separated: hole is swept through the depletion layer and electron goes to contact of n region. Thus, each act of generation corresponds to an act of transport of an elementary charge. Similar thing happens at the p side of the junction... (generation in the depletion region is also an important mechanism contributing to the overall current in Si diodes, especially for large reverse bias voltage, when the depletion layer is wide).

• The charge transport through the reverse biased diode can be attributed to acts of generation! The explanation based on the drift current (given earlier) is still valid: generated holes and electrons drift through the depletion layer.

J

X

xn

++++++

------

pno equilibrium

value

Ip

∆pn 0( ) ev∝

xn

Here: ∆pn < 0

minority hole concentration

Page 10: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-10

Positive Applied Voltage

• The minority carrier charges have an average lifetime of , before they recombine

• What is the rate at which charge must be flowing in from the external circuit to replenish the lost charge?

τ

pno equilibrium value

Ip∆p 0( ) ev∝

Qp

• What does this charge flow represent?

Page 11: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-11

Diffusion Capacitance

• By definition

CdQdV-------=

• Since Q is directly proportional to IA, the current at operating point A, then

CdI AdV---------∝

• And since I is an exponential function of voltage

• Diffusion Capacitance (nonlinear function of voltage):

C I A∝

Cd kcIA

=

• The change in this charge with change in voltage represents the diffusion capacitance

pno equilibrium value

∆pn 0( ) ev dv+∝

∆pn 0( ) ev∝

Page 12: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-12

Positive Applied Voltage

• From I ev∝

• One can derive the complete expression for the steady state diode current:

• IS is saturation current (component due to drift) which depends on area of the junction and temperature --- why?

• IS is on the order of 10-15Amps for ICs, but doubles with every 5º C increase in temperature

• n varies between 1 and 2, and depends on how the junction is formed

• VT is the thermal voltage, KT/q

i I S ev nVT⁄

1– =

q 1.602 1019–

C×≡ K 1.38 1023– j

°K-------×≡

• At room temperature, 20ºC, VT = 25.2mV

Page 13: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-13

Positive Applied Voltage

• Does the equation agree with the physical explanation when v=0 and v<<0?

• What’s the expression look like for v >> VT?

i I S ev nVT⁄

1– =

Page 14: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-14

Positive Applied Voltage

• Since the current varies exponentially with voltage, the look of the curve as compared to an ideal curve depends very much on the range over which the plot is made

• One might say that the turn-on voltage is 0.7 volts in this plot, but this really depends on how you view the current scale

• Note that Vo is NOT the turn-on voltage

D0Custom

+ 5VVD

ID1

>>>>>> MA

0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8

0

10

20

30

mA

ID

Vo=Vj=1.0v

Page 15: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-15

Positive Applied Voltage

• On a semi-log scale, it is easy to see that an order of magnitude change in current corresponds to ~60mV (n=1) change in voltage at room temperature

I 1 I SeV1 nVT⁄

=

I 2 I SeV2 nVT⁄

=

V2 V1– nVT

I 2I 1-----

ln 2.3nVT

I 2I 1-----

log= =

500 520 540 560 580 600 V [mV]1e-7

1e-6

1e-5

1e-4I [A]

LOG(I)

Page 16: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-16

Variation with Temperature

• The diode characteristic varies with temperature since IS and VT vary with T

• The change in voltage is approximately 2mV for every 1º C increase

30º C25º C20º C

500 520 540 560 580 600 V [mV]1e-7

1e-6

1e-5

1e-4I [A]

LOG(ID2) LOG(ID1) LOG(ID3)

Page 17: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-17

Variation with Temperature

• The change in voltage is approximately 2mV for every 1º C increase

30º C25º C

20º C

700 710 720 mV

0

1

2

mA

ID1 ID2 ID3

2mV °C⁄–Linear Scale for ID

Page 18: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-18

Complete Characteristic

• The reverse current is approximately, IS, but it can be much larger than this value as V becomes more negative

-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2

A

ID1

Page 19: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-19

Reverse Characteristic

• A plot of the reverse characteristic only shows the increase in saturation current with reverse bias

-5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

pA

• The SPICE model we use is linear for this portion of characteristics.

-6

ID1

Page 20: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-20

Breakdown Characteristic

• A plot of the reverse characteristic including breakdown

-7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0

-0.2

-0.1

0.0

PA

ID1

Page 21: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-21

Diode Circuits

• Solving for the loop current requires solving a nonlinear equation in the circuit below

• Superimpose Thevenin characteristic on diode i-v curve

id

vdVs

VsR

-------

VS

R

Page 22: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-22

Diode Circuits in SPICE

• SPICE solves these circuit problems via Newton-Raphson iteration

id

VsR

-------

Vsvd

initial guess for diode voltage

Page 23: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-23

Simplified Diode Models

• For hand calculations we generally use a simplified diode model

• A two-piece piecewise-linear model is the most obvious choice

VS

R id

vdVD0

• What are the equations for this straight-line characteristic?

Page 24: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-24

Simplified Diode Models

• What does the diode equivalent circuit model look like?

id

vdVD0

slope = 1/rD

Page 25: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-25

Even Simpler Model

• To further simplify a hand analysis, we generally rely on the following model:

id

vdVD0

VD0 ON

OFF

• The value of VD0, the “on”-voltage, is based on the current level for which one would consider the diode to be “on” ---- typically ~ 0.7 volts

Page 26: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-26

Example

• Solve for the current, I, and the voltage, V, in the circuit below:

R

VCC

+

V

_

I

Page 27: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-27

Small Signal Diode Model

• For analog design we’re often interested in the small signal response

• Especially for transistor circuits, we will bias a nonlinear circuit to a dc operating point, then model it as linear for the small ac analog signals

• Model the diode as a single piecewise linear segment that passes through the bias point

VS

R

vs(t)+

vd(t)

_

id

vdVD

ID

Page 28: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-28

Small Signal Diode Model

• With a piecewise linear tangential approximation passing through the bias point, the model represents the exact dc solution

• If the ac signal is small, we can assume that the diode variation in current due to a small variation in voltage follows the piecewise linear approximation

id

vdVD

ID

slope=1/rd

Page 29: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-29

Small Signal Diode Model

• This approximation, if valid, allows us to analyze the ac and dc responses separately

VS

R

vs(t)+

vd(t)

_

Page 30: Reverse Biased Capacitance - Carnegie Mellon Universityee321/spring99/LECT/lect10feb17.pdf · Reverse Biased Capacitance ... • Now the diffusion current dominates the drift current

Lecture 10-30

Small Signal Diode Model

VS

R

vs(t)+

vd(t)

_