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Lec07 SSMD

This document contains lecture notes on solid state materials and devices. It includes sections on energy bands and charge carriers in semiconductors, the effect of temperature on carrier concentration, carrier drift, conductivity and resistivity, electrical resistance, resistivity dependence on doping, and the effect of temperature on mobility. It also provides examples and exercises on topics like intrinsic carrier concentration, band gap, Fermi level position, and intrinsic resistivity calculations for doped and intrinsic semiconductors.

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Tayyaba Sahar
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views

Lec07 SSMD

This document contains lecture notes on solid state materials and devices. It includes sections on energy bands and charge carriers in semiconductors, the effect of temperature on carrier concentration, carrier drift, conductivity and resistivity, electrical resistance, resistivity dependence on doping, and the effect of temperature on mobility. It also provides examples and exercises on topics like intrinsic carrier concentration, band gap, Fermi level position, and intrinsic resistivity calculations for doped and intrinsic semiconductors.

Uploaded by

Tayyaba Sahar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 11

8/6/2020

Lecture-7
Online-Classes
Corse Title: Solid State Materials and Devices
Course Code: EL-501
Course Teachers: Dr. Sadia Muniza Faraz
Semester: Spring-2020
Offered to: M. Eng. (Electronic Engineering)

Department of Electronic Engineering


NED University of Engineering and Technology Karachi, Pakistan

Chapter-3 Energy Bands and charge Carriers in


Semiconductors

Book: Solid state Electronic Devices


By: Ben G. Streetman & Sanajay
7th edition - (May 11, 2015)
Publisher: Pearson;

1
8/6/2020

Effect of Temperature on carrier concentration

Exercise
A Si device is to be operated
at 400K and it requires n-
type material
we have two option
Option-1 Doping of Arsenic(As) in Si
with Nd=1.0x1014/cm3
Option-2 Doping of Phosphorous(P) in
Si with Nd=1.0x1016/cm3
Which option is suitable?
Why ?

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8/6/2020

Exercise
find the equilibrium electron and hole
concentration for a uniformly doped
sample of Si under following conditions
• (i) Nd=8 x 1015/cm3 T=450K
• (ii)Nd=8 x 1014/cm3 T=650o
Solution:
(i) no  N d  8 1015 / cm3
no  8 1015 / cm3
@ T  450 K
ni  ?( find  value  from  graph)
1000 1000
 2.2 ni  110 / cm
14 3

T 450
ni2
no po  ni2 po  po  ?
no
5

Compensation
• when a semiconductor contains both donors and
acceptors
• donors and acceptors compensate each other
• a p-type semiconductor doped with Na
acceptors can be converted to an n-type
semiconductor by simply adding donors until the
concentration exceeds Na.
• The electron concentration is then given by
no= Nd – Na
• N-type compensated semiconductor
if ( Nd>Na) then no = Nd — Na
• P-type compensated semiconductor
if (Na>Nd) then po = Na — Nd
• Completely compensated semiconductor
(Na=Nd)
• Compensation doping?? 6

3
8/6/2020

Space Charge Neutrality


• Charge neutrality occurs when all the
charge in a volume adds to zero

Negative charges:
Conduction electrons (density = no)
Ionized acceptor atoms (density = NA)

Positive charges:
Holes (density = po) po - no + ND - NA = 0
Ionized donor atoms (density = ND)

• the sum of the charged carriers and


ions must equal zero po + ND = no +NA
7

Carrier Drift
• The process in which charged particles move because of an
electric field is called drift.
• Charged particles within a semiconductor move with an
average velocity proportional to the electric field.
– The proportionality constant is the carrier mobility.
 
Hole velocity
vp   p E
 
Electron velocity vn    n E
qt
Notation: p  *
mp
p  hole mobility (cm2/V·s)
n  electron mobility (cm2/V·s) n 
qt
*
mn 8

4
8/6/2020

Drift Current
• Drift current is proportional to the carrier
velocity and carrier concentration:
   
vdp   p E vdn   n E
Total current density

J  J p  Jn

J p   q nVdp  q p po E
J n   q nVdn  q n no E

 p  q p po J p   p E  Conductivity
 n  q n no J n   n E  Conductivity

Conductivity and Resistivity


• In a semiconductor, both electrons and holes conduct current:
J p ,drift  qp p E J n ,drift  qn(  n E )
J drift  J p,drift  J n,drift  qp p E  qnn E
J drift  (qp p  qnn ) E  E
• The conductivity of a semiconductor is given by

  qp p  qnn
• The resistivity of a semiconductor is given by
1


10

5
8/6/2020

Electrical Resistance
I V
+ _

W
t
uniformly doped semiconductor

V L
Resistance R 
I Wt
where  is the resistivity
11

Resistivity Dependence on Doping


For n-type material:
1

qno  n

For p-type material:


p-type 1

qpo  p
n-type
Note: This plot (for Si) does
not apply to compensated
material (doped with both
acceptors and donors).

12

6
8/6/2020

Problem
The intrinsic resistivity of Ge at 300K is 47 Ω.cm.
(a) What is the intrinsic carrier concentration, given that µn = 3900 cm2
/V.sec and µp = 1900 cm2 /V.sec.
(b) If 5 x 1017 /cm3 donor impurities are added to this sample then find EF -
Ei.

The resistivity is given by


1
 Find  conductivity ( )  ?

The conductivity is given by

  qpo  p  qno  n   qni  p  qni  n


For intrinsic materials   qni (  p   n )
po  no  ni
ni  ? no  ni e( E F  Ei ) / kT

  qpo  p  qno  n
13

Problem
An unknown semiconductor was found to have the concentrations of 9 x 1016/
cm3 and 7 x 109/ cm3 for donors and acceptors respectively. The Fermi level is
such that
EC –EF = EF –Ei = 0.275 eV. At room temperature find
1. Intrinsic carrier concentration
2. Band gap (Eg)
3. Intrinsic resistivity

no  ni e( EF  Ei ) / kT
N d  9 10 / cm 16 3

N a  7 109 / cm3 ni  ??
E g  ??
no  N d  N a
  qni ( p  n )
no  ??
given   n  2  p  1400cm 2 / V . sec

1
   ???

14

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8/6/2020

Effect of Temperature on Mobility


• Lattice Scattering(phonon Scattering)
• Impurity Scattering

15

Mobility Dependence on Doping


Carrier mobilities in Si at 300K

16

8
8/6/2020

Mobility Dependence on Temperature

3
 impurityT 2

3
 latticeT 2

17

18

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8/6/2020

Example: Resistance Calculation


What is the resistivity of a Si sample doped with 1016/cm3 Boron?
Answer:
1

qn n  qp p
1

qp p


 (1.6 10 19 )(1016 )(450) 1

 1.4   cm

19

Example: Dopant Compensation


Consider the same Si sample doped with 1016/cm3 Boron, and
additionally doped with 1017/cm3 Arsenic. What is its resistivity?
Answer:
1

qn n  qp p

1

1.6 10 19 [(1017 )(900)  1016 450]
 0.066  cm

Try  no  N d  N a
  ??

20

10
8/6/2020

High field effect


vd = E
• strong electric fields - electron velocity
is no longer proportional to the field
• The heating of free carriers at high
electric fields results in a saturation of
the drift velocity
• Decrease in mobility - originating from
various reasons such as scattering
mechanisms
• the increase in kinetic energy of the
electrons is statistically interpreted as
a raising of the electrons' temperature,
so they are termed 'hot electrons' Hot
carrier effect
• Silicon thermal velocity Vth=1x107
cm/sec
21
,

The End

22

11

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