Lecture #13 ANNOUNCEMENTS • Quiz #2 next Friday (2/23) will cover the following: – carrier action (drift, diffusion, R-G) – continuity & minority-carrier diffusion.
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Transcript Lecture #13 ANNOUNCEMENTS • Quiz #2 next Friday (2/23) will cover the following: – carrier action (drift, diffusion, R-G) – continuity & minority-carrier diffusion.
Lecture #13
ANNOUNCEMENTS
• Quiz #2 next Friday (2/23) will cover the following:
– carrier action (drift, diffusion, R-G)
– continuity & minority-carrier diffusion eq’ns
– MS contacts (electrostatics, I-V characteristics)
• Review session will be held Friday 2/16 at 12:30PM
• No office hour or coffee hour today
OUTLINE
• Metal-semiconductor contacts (cont.)
– practical ohmic contacts
– small-signal capacitance
• Introduction to pn junction diodes
Reading: Finish Ch. 14, Start Ch. 5
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 1
Practical Ohmic Contact
• In practice, most M-S contacts are rectifying
• To achieve a contact which conducts easily in
both directions, we dope the semiconductor
very heavily
W is so narrow that carriers can tunnel directly
through the barrier
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 2
Band Diagram for VA0
Equilibrium Band Diagram
W
2 s Bn
qND
qVbiBn
EFM
q(Vbi-VA)
EFM
Ec, EFS
Ec, EFS
Ev
Ev
H ( Bn VA )
tunnelingprobability P e
where H 4 s m / h 5.4 10
*
n
9
J S M qPND vthx qND kT / 2m e
*
n
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 3
ND
*
n
3/2
m / mo cm
H ( Bn VA ) / N D
V
1
Specific Contact Resistivity, rc
• Unit: W-cm2
– rc is the resistance of a 1 cm2 contact
• For a practical ohmic contact,
rc e
H B / N D
want small B, large ND for small contact resistance
Rcontact
Spring 2007
rc
Acontact
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 4
Approaches to Lowering fB
• Image-force barrier lowering
qfBo
f
f
EF
EC
metal n+ Si
q
s
N a N = dopant concentration in surface layer
4 a = width of heavily doped surface layer
Very high active dopant concentration desired
• fM engineering
– Impurity segregation via silicidation
A. Kinoshita et al. (Toshiba), 2004 Symp. VLSI Technology Digest, p. 168
– Dual ( low-fM / high-fM ) silicide technology
• Band-gap reduction
– strain A. Yagishita et al. (UC-Berkeley), 2003 SSDM Extended Abstracts, p. 708
– germanium incorporation M. C. Ozturk et al. (NCSU),
2002 IEDM Technical Digest, p. 375
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 5
Voltage Drop across an Ohmic Contact
• Ideally, Rcontact is very small, so little voltage is
dropped across the ohmic contact, i.e. VA 0V
equilibrium conditions prevail
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 6
Review: MS-Contact Charge Distribution
• In a Schottky contact, charge is stored on either side
of the MS junction
– The applied bias VA modulates this charge
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 7
Schottky Diode: Small-Signal Capacitance
• If an a.c. voltage va is applied in series with the d.c.
bias VA, the charge stored in the Schottky contact will
be modulated at the frequency of the a.c. voltage
dva
displacement current will flow: i C
dt
CA
Spring 2007
s
W
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 8
Using C-V Data to Determine B
s
s
qND s
CA A
A
W
2Vbi VA
2 s
qND
Vbi VA
1 2(Vbi VA )
2
C
qND s A2
Once Vbi and ND are known, Bn can be determined:
qVbi q Bn ( Ec EF ) FB
Spring 2007
Nc
q Bn kT ln
ND
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 9
Summary
EF
Ec
Ev
EF
Ec
EF
Ev
Ec
EF
Ev
Ec
Ev
Since it is difficult to achieve small B, practical ohmic
contacts are achieved with heavy doping:
EF
Ec
Ev
Ec
EF
Ev
Charge storage in an MS junction small-signal capacitance:
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 10
CA
s
W
pn Junctions
Donors
N-type
P-type
– V +
I
I
N
P
V
Reverse bias
Spring 2007
Forward bias
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 11
diode
symbol
Terminology
Doping Profile:
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 12
Idealized Junctions
Spring 2007
EE130 Lecture 13, Slide 13