DESIGN OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS Course Code : 11-EC201 DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS & COMPUTER...
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Transcript of DESIGN OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS Course Code : 11-EC201 DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS & COMPUTER...
DESIGN OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
Course Code : 11-EC201
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS & COMPUTER ENGINEERING
Diodes
Contents • Introduction, • Ideal Diode, • Physical Operation of PN Junction Diode,• Terminal Characteristics of Junction Diodes,• Modeling the Diode Forward Characteristics,• Limiting and Clamping Circuits,• Special Diodes: Operation in the Reverse Breakdown Region in
Zener Diodes, The Schottky-Barrier Diode(SBD), Varactors, Photo Diodes, Light Emitting Diodes(LEDS)
Introduction
• The diode is the simplest and most fundamental nonlinear circuit element.
• Just like resistor, it has two terminals.• Unlike resistor, it has a nonlinear current-voltage
characteristics.• Its use in rectifiers is the most common application.
Physical Structure
P-N junctions
• The voltage developed across a p-n junction caused by • the diffusion of electrons from the n-side of the junction into
the p-side and • the diffusion of holes from the p-side of the junction into the n-
side
Built-in Voltage
2ln
0i
AD
n
NN
q
kTV
This built-in voltage prevents all of the electrons and holes from diffusing throughout the diode until there is a constant concentration of electrons and holes everywhere.
ni ≡ intrinsic carrier concentration [cm−3 ]
Biasing a Diode
• When Va > 0V, the diode is forward biased
• When Va < 0V, the diode is reverse biased
When the applied voltage (Va) is zero
• The diode voltage and current are equal to zero on average• Any electron that diffuses through the depletion region from
the n-side to the p-side is counterbalanced by an electron that drifts from the p-side to the n-side• Any hole that diffuses through the depletion region from the
p-side to the n-side is counterbalanced by an hole that drifts from the n-side to the p-side• So, at any one instant (well under a nanosecond), we may
measure a diode current. This current gives rise to one of the sources of electronic noise.
Schematically
When the applied voltage is less than zero
• The energy barrier between the p-side and n-side of the diode became larger.• It becomes less favorable for diffusion currents to flow• It become more favorable for drift currents to flow• The diode current is non-zero• The amount of current that flows across the p-n junction
depends on the number of electrons in the p-type material and the number of holes in the n-type material• Therefore, the more heavily doped the p-n junction is the
smaller the current will be that flows when the diode is reverse biased
Schematically
Applied Voltage is greater than zero
• The energy barrier between the p-side and n-side of the diode became smaller with increasing positive applied voltage until there is no barrier left.• It becomes less favorable for drift currents to flow• There is no electric field left to force them to flow• There is nothing to prevent the diffusion currents to flow• The diode current is non-zero• The amount of current that flows across the p-n junction
depends on the gradient of electrons (difference in the concentration) between the n- and p-type material and the gradient of holes between the p- and n-type material
• The point at which the barrier becomes zero (the flat-band condition) depends on the value of the built-in voltage. The larger the built-in voltage, the more applied voltage is needed to remove the barrier.• It takes more applied voltage to get current to flow for a
heavily doped p-n junction
When the applied Voltage is greater than zero
Schematically
Terminal Characteristics of Junction Diodes
The i–v characteristic of a silicon junction diode.
The characteristic curve consists of three distinct regions:
1. The forward-bias region, determined by v > 0
2. The reverse-bias region, determined by v < 0
3. The breakdown region, determined by v < -VZK
The diode i–v relationship with some scales expanded and others compressed in order to reveal details.
Ideal Diode Equation
Where ID and VD are the diode current and voltage, respectively
q is the charge on the electron, 1.6 ×10−19 coulombs n is the ideality factor:
n = 1 for indirect semiconductors (Si, Ge, etc.)n = 2 for direct semiconductors (GaAs, InP, etc.)
k is Boltzmann’s constant 1.38 ×10−23 , e = Euler's number ≈ 2.718281828 T is temperature in Kelvin; kT/q is also known as Vth, the thermal voltage. At 300K (room temperature), kT/q = 25.9mV
The relationship between voltage and current for a PN junction is described by this equation, referred to as the "diode equation,“
1nkT
qV
SD
D
eII
The Forward-Bias Region
The forward bias or simply forward – region of operation is entered when the terminal voltage v is positive. In the forward region the i-v relationship is closely approximated by
• ‘Is’ is a constant for a given diode at a given temperature. • The current ‘Is’ is usually called the saturation current. • ‘Is’ is directly proportional to the cross-sectional area of the
diode, therefore it is also known as the scale current.
For "small-signal" diodes, which are small-size diodes intended for low-power applications, ‘Is’ is on the order of 10~15 A. As a rule of thumb, ‘Is’ doubles in value for every 5°C rise in temperature.
)1/
( TnVve
sIi
The voltage VT In the above equation is a constant called the thermal voltage and is given by
wherek = Boltzmann's constant = 1.38 x 10 -23 joules/kelvinT- the absolute temperature in kelvins = 273 + temperature in °Cq = the magnitude of electronic charge = 1.60 x 10~1 9 coulomb
• At room temperature (20°C) VT ≈ 25.2 mV.• In rapid approximate circuit analysis VT ≈ 25 mV at room
temperature
)1/
( TnVve
sIi
q
kTTV
The constant n has a value between 1 and 2, depending on the material and the physical structure of the diode.
• Diodes made using the standard integrated circuit fabrication process exhibit n = 1 when operated under normal conditions. • Diodes available as discrete two-terminal components generally
exhibit n = 2. • In general, the value of n = 1 unless otherwise specified.
)1/
( TnVve
sIi
For appreciable current i in the forward direction, specifically for i > Is, above equation can be approximated by the exponential relationship
This relationship can be expressed alternatively in the logarithmic form
where In denotes the natural (base e) logarithm
)1/
( TnVve
sIi
TnVvesIi
/
sI
iT
nVv ln
Let us consider the forward i-v relationship in the above equation and evaluate the current I1 corresponding to a diode voltage V1:
Similarly, if the voltage is V2, the diode current I2 will be
These two equations can be combined to produce
which can be rewritten as
or, in terms of base-10 logarithms
For a decade (factor of 10) change in current, the diode voltage drop changes by 2.3nvT, which is approximately 60 mv for n = 1 and 120 mv for n = 2.
TnVvesIi
/1
1
TnVvesIi
/2
2
TnVvvesI
i
i /)12
(
1
2
1
2ln12 I
I
TnVvv
1
2log3.212 I
I
TnVVV
A glance at the i-v characteristic in the forward region
• The current is negligibly small for v smaller than about 0.5 v (cut-in voltage)• For a "fully conducting" diode, the voltage drop lies in a
narrow range, approximately 0.6 V to 0.8 v. • This gives rise to a simple "model" for the diode where it is
assumed that a conducting diode has approximately a 0.7-V drop across it. • Diodes with different current ratings (i.e., Different areas and
correspondingly different is) will exhibit the 0.7-V drop at different currents. • A small-signal diode may be considered to have a 0.7-V drop
at i = 1 ma, while a higher-power diode may have a 0.7-V drop at i = 1 A.
At a given constant diode current the voltage drop across the diode decreases by approximately 2 mV for every 1°C increase in temperature.
The temperature dependence of the diode forward characteristic.
The change in diode voltage with temperature has been exploited in the design of electronic thermometers.
The Reverse-Bias Region
The reverse-bias region of operation is entered when the diode voltage v is made negative.
The current in the reverse direction is constant and equal to Is.
fromThis constancy is the reason behind the term saturation current.
• The reverse current also increases somewhat with the increase in magnitude of the reverse voltage. • A large part of the reverse current is due to leakage effects
)1/
( TnVve
sIis
Ii
The Breakdown Region
• If the magnitude of the reverse voltage exceeds a threshold value that is specific to the particular diode called the breakdown voltage• This is the voltage at the "knee" of the i-v curve and is
denoted VZK, where the subscript Z stands for zener (to be explained shortly) and K denotes knee.• In the breakdown region the reverse current increases
rapidly, with the associated increase in voltage drop being very small.
EXAMPLE
A silicon diode said to be a 1-mA device displays a forward voltage of 0.7 V at a current of 1 mA. Evaluate the junction scaling constant 7; in the event that n is either 1 or 2. What scaling constants would apply for a 1-A diode of the same manufacture that conducts 1 A at 0.7 V? example
Solution Since then
For the 1-mA diode:
If n = 1: Is = 10 -3 e-700/25 = 6.9 x 10-16 A, or about 10 -15 AIf n = 2: Is = 10 -3 e-700/50 = 8.3 x 10 -10 A, or about 10 -9 A
The diode conducting 1 A at 0.7 V corresponds to one-thousand 1-mA diodes in parallel with a total junction area 1000 times greater.
Thus IS is also 1000 times greater, being 1pA and 1µA, respectively for n=1 and n=2.
TnVv
esIi
/ T
nVvie
sI
/
Modeling the Diode Forward Characteristic
A simple circuit used to illustrate the analysis of circuits in which the diode is forward conducting
The Exponential Model
Assuming that VDD is greater than 0.5 V or so, the diode current will be much greater than Is, and we can represent the diode ‘i-v’ characteristic by the exponential relationship, resulting in
)/(T
nVDVeSI
DI
The other equation that governs circuit operation is obtained by writing a Kirchhoff loop equation, resulting in
RDV
DDV
DI
Graphical analysis using the exponential diode model.
The curve represents the exponential diode equation ,
and the straight line represents
)/(T
nVDVeSI
DI
RDV
DDV
DI
Graphical Analysis Using the Exponential Model
• Graphical analysis is performed by plotting the relationships
of Eqs. and on the i-v plane.
• The load line intersects the diode curve at point Q, which represents the operating point of the circuit.
• Its coordinates give the values of ID and VD.
• Graphical analysis aids in the visualization of circuit operation
)/(T
nVDVeSI
DI R
DV
DDV
DI
Piecewise-linear (battery-plus resistance)
For vD <= VD0: iD = 0;For vD >= VD0: iD = 1/rD(vD -VD0 )
The Constant-Voltage-Drop Model
A forward-conducting diode exhibits a constant voltage drop VD. The value of VD is usually taken to be 0.7 v.
For iD > 0: vD = 0.7v
The Ideal-Diode Model
For iD > 0: vD = 0
The Small-Signal Model
Development of the diode small-signal model. Note that the numerical values shown are for a diode with n = 2.
For small signals superimposed on VD and ID: id = vd / rd rd = nVT / ID
(For n = 1, vd is limited to 5 mV; for n = 2, 10 mV)
Ideal Diode
• The ideal diode may be considered the most fundamental nonlinear circuit element.
• It is a two-terminal device having the circuit symbol
Figure 1 The ideal diode: (a) diode circuit symbol;
Figure 1 (b) i–v characteristic; (c) equivalent circuit in the reverse direction; (d) equivalent circuit in the forward direction.
Figure 3 (a) Rectifier circuit. (b) Input waveform.
A Simple Application: The Rectifier
A fundamental application of the diode, one that makes use of its severely nonlinear i-v curve, is the rectifier circuit. The circuit consists of the series connection of a diode D and a resistor R .
Another Application: Diode Logic Gates
Diodes together with resistors can be used to implement digital logic functions.
Diode logic gates: (a) OR gate; (b) AND gate (in a positive-logic system).
The two modes of operation of ideal diodes and the use of an external circuit to limit the forward current (a) and the reverse voltage (b).
Series Positive
Positive biased Negative biased Non biased
Negative Positive biased Negative biased Non biased
Parallel Positive
Positive biased Negative biased Non biased
Negative Positive biased Negative biased Non biased
Clippers
Series Clipper Circuits & Output Waveforms
Positive series clipper circuits with bias and output waveforms
Positive bias
Negative bias
Input Output Waveforms and Transfer characteristics with Non Ideal Diodes
Shunt parallel positive clipper circuit and output waveform
Positive shunt clipper circuit with bias and output waveform
Example
Positive shunt clipper circuit with bias and output waveform
A variety of basic limiting circuits.
A variety of basic limiting circuits.
A variety of basic limiting circuits.
Limiter Circuits
•General transfer characteristic for a limiter circuit.
•Applying a sine wave to a limiter can result in clipping off its two peaks
• The general transfer characteristic describes a double limiter—that is, a limiter that works on both the positive and negative peaks of an input waveform.
• If an input waveform is fed to a double limiter, its two peaks will be clipped off.
• Limiters therefore are sometimes referred to as clippers.
• This limiter is described as a hard limiter.
• Soft limiting is characterized by smoother transitions between the linear region and the saturation regions and a slope greater than zero in the saturation regions.
• Depending on the application, either hard or soft limiting may be preferred
Soft limiting.
The Clamped Capacitor or DC Restorer
The clamped capacitor or dc restorer with a square-wave input and no load.
Action of a diode clamper circuit: (a) a typical diode clamper circuit, (b) the sinusoidal input signal, (c) the capacitor voltage, and (d) the output voltage
A.C Signal Positive Clamped Negative Clamped
Clamped Circuit Input & Output Waveforms
• The output waveform will therefore have its lowest peak clamped to 0 V, which is why the circuit is called a clamped capacitor.
• Feeding the resulting pulse waveform to a clamping circuit provides it with a well-determined dc component, a process known as dc restoration. Therefore This circuit is also called a dc restorer
The clamped capacitor with a load resistance R.
The Voltage Doubler
Voltage doubler: (a) circuit; (b) waveform of the voltage across D1.
Types of diodes
• Rectifier diodes are typically used for power supply applications. Within the power supply, you will see diodes as elements that convert AC power to DC power.
• Switching diodes have lower power ratings than rectifier diodes, but can function better in high frequency application and in clipping and clamping operations that deal with short-duration pulse waveforms
• Zener diodes, a special kind of diode that can recover from breakdown caused when the reverse-bias voltage exceeds the diode breakdown voltage. These diodes are commonly used as voltage-level regulators and protectors against high voltage surges
• Optical diodes
• Special diodes, such as varactors (diodes with variable capacity), tunnel diodes or Schottky diodes
Types of diodes
• Zener diodes, a special kind of diode that can recover from breakdown caused when the reverse-bias voltage exceeds the diode breakdown voltage. These diodes are commonly used as voltage-level regulators and protectors against high voltage surges
• Optical diodes
• Special diodes, such as varactors (diodes with variable capacity), tunnel diodes or Schottky diodes
Types of diodes
Operation In The Reverse Breakdown Region-ZENER Diodes
Circuit symbol for a zener diode Model for the zener diode.
The diode i–v characteristic with the breakdown region shown in some detail.
Temperature Effects
The dependency of zener voltage on the temperature is specified in terms of the temperature coefficient (TC).
The value of TC depends on the zener voltage, and for a given diode the TC varies with the operating current.
• Zener diodes whose Vz are lower than about 5 V exhibit a negative TC.
• Zeners with higher voltages exhibit a positive TC.
• The TC of a zener diode with a Vz of about 5 V can be made zero by operating the diode at a specified current.
Schottky Barrier Diode (SBD)• It is a metal-semiconductor (MS) diode. (These are the oldest
diodes). • Metal contact with moderately doped n type material.• The general shape of the Schottky diode and I-V
characteristics are similar to PN junction diodes, but the details of current flow are different.
• In a PN junction diodes, current is due to• Recombination in the depletion layer under small forward
bias.• Hole injection from p+ side under larger forward bias.
• In a Schottky diodes current is due to• Electron injection from the semiconductor to the metal.
One semiconductor region of the pn junction diode is replaced by a non-ohmic rectifying metal contact. A Schottky contact is easily added to n-type silicon, metal region becomes anode. n+ region is added to ensure that cathode contact is ohmic.
Schottky diode turns on at lower voltage than pn junction diode, has significantly reduced internal charge storage under forward bias.
Schottky Barrier Diode (SBD)
where B is Schottky barrier height, VA is applied voltage, A is area, A* is Richardson’s constant.
• Current is conducted by majority carrier (electrons). • Switching speed of the SBD is much higher.• The forward voltage of SBD is lower than that of PN
junction diode.
V – I Characteristics
kTkT
qV
TAIIIB
ewhere1A
e 2*ss
A
SBDForward Voltage Drop
PN diodeForward Voltage Drop
Silicon 0.3V – 0.5V 0.6V – 0.8V
Varactor Diode• Variable Capacitors• Transition capacitance under reverse bias• Diffusion capacitance under forward bias• Used in automatic tuning of radio receivers
Fig: Varactor diode. (a) Doped regions are like capacitor plates separated by a dielectric (b) ac equivalent circuit(c) Schematic symbol (d) capacitance versus reverse voltage
Photo Diode
• Used to convert light to electric signal• Reverse biased PN diode is exposed to light• Photons liberated causes breakage of covalent bonds• Liberation of electron – hole pairs• Results in flow of reverse current across the junction
called photo current• Photo current is proportional to intensity of light
A photodiode circuit. The diode is reverse biased
Light Emitting Diode (LED)
• The operation is inverse to that of a photo diode• It converts forward current in to light• Minority carriers are injected across the junction and
diffuse in to P & N regions• Minority carriers recombine with majority carriers emitting
photons• Made of types III-V semiconductors (e.g., GaAs). • Use direct band gap materials like Gallium Arsenide• Light emitted proportional to the no. of re-combinations• Wide range of applications in different types of displays• In order to have a visible light output, the band gap of the
semiconductor should be larger then Si. • Have a much larger VD0 between 1.7 to 1.9 V.
• Both Schottky diodes and LEDs are similar to regular junction diodes (with the exemption of VD0 value) and the pierce linear model and analysis tools developed above can be applied.
• When a light-emitting diode is switched on, electrons are able to recombine with holes within the device, releasing energy in the form of photons.
• This effect is called ELECTRO-LUMINESCENCE
• The color of the light is determined by the energy band gap of the semiconductor.
• The band gap of a semiconductor is of two types, a direct band gap or an indirect band gap.
• The band gap is called "direct" if the momentum of electrons and holes is the same in both the conduction band and the valence band; an electron can directly emit a photon.
• In an "indirect" gap, a photon cannot be emitted because the electron must pass through an intermediate state and transfer momentum to the crystal lattice.
Cont…
• The minimal-energy state in the conduction band and the maximal-energy state in the valence band are each characterized by a certain crystal momentum (k-vector) in the Brillouin zone.
• If the k-vectors are the same, it is called a "direct gap".
• If they are different, it is called an "indirect gap".
Cont…
LED
The inner workings of an LED, showing circuit (top) and band diagram (bottom)
I-V diagram for a diode. An LED will begin to emit light when the on-voltage is exceeded. Typical on voltages are 2–3 volts.
Color Wavelength range (nm) Typical efficacy (lm/W)
Red 620 < λ < 645 72Red-orange 610 < λ < 620 98Green 520 < λ < 550 93Cyan 490 < λ < 520 75Blue 460 < λ < 490 37
COLORWAVE-
LENGTH [NM]
VOLTAGE DROP [ΔV] SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIAL
Infrared λ > 760 ΔV < 1.63 Gallium arsenide (GaAs)Aluminium gallium arsenide (AlGaAs)
Red 610 < λ < 760 1.63 < ΔV < 2.03
Aluminium gallium arsenide (AlGaAs)Gallium arsenide phosphide (GaAsP)Aluminium gallium indium phosphide (AlGaInP)Gallium(III) phosphide (GaP)
Orange 590 < λ < 610 2.03 < ΔV < 2.10
Gallium arsenide phosphide (GaAsP)Aluminium gallium indium phosphide (AlGaInP)Gallium(III) phosphide (GaP)
Green 500 < λ < 570 1.9[< ΔV < 4.0
Traditional green: Gallium(III) phosphide (GaP)Aluminium gallium indium phosphide (AlGaInP)Aluminium gallium phosphide (AlGaP)Pure green: Indium gallium nitride (InGaN) / Gallium(III) nitride (GaN)
Blue 450 < λ < 500 2.48 < ΔV < 3.7Zinc selenide (ZnSe)Indium gallium nitride (InGaN)Silicon carbide (SiC) as substrateSilicon (Si) as substrate—under development
Violet 400 < λ < 450 2.76 < ΔV < 4.0 Indium gallium nitride (InGaN)
Purple multiple types 2.48 < ΔV < 3.7Dual blue/red LEDs,blue with red phosphor,or white with purple plastic
Ultraviolet λ < 400 3.1 < ΔV < 4.4
Diamond (235 nm)Boron nitride (215 nm)Aluminium nitride (AlN) (210 nm)Aluminium gallium nitride (AlGaN)Aluminium gallium indium nitride (AlGaInN)—down to 210 nm
Pink multiple types ΔV ~ 3.3[
Blue with one or two phosphor layers:yellow with red, orange or pink phosphor added afterwards,or white with pink pigment or dye.
White Broad spectrum ΔV = 3.5 Blue/UV diode with yellow phosphor
There are three main categories of miniature single die LEDs:• Low-current: typically rated for 2mA at around 2V
(approximately 4mW consumption).• Standard: 20mA LEDs (ranging from approximately 40mW to
90mW) at around:1.9 to 2.1 V for red, orange and yellow,3.0 to 3.4 V for green and blue,2.9 to 4.2 V for violet, pink, purple and white.
• Ultra-high-output: 20mA at approximately 2V or 4–5V, designed for viewing in direct sunlight.
5V and 12V LEDs are ordinary miniature LEDs that incorporate a suitable series resistor for direct connection to a 5V or 12V supply.
Light Emitting Diode (LED)
Direct band gap semiconductors used for LEDs: Galium Arsenide (Ga As)Gallium Antimony (Ga Sb)Arsenic, Antimony, Phosphorous
Impurities added: Group – II materials like Zinc (Zn), Magnesium (Mg), Cadmium (Cd)
Donors: Group – VI materials like Tellicum (Te), Sulphur (S) etc…
Impurity Concentration: 1017 – 1018 /cm3 for donor atoms and
1017 – 1019 /cm3 for Acceptor atomsColors: Gallium Phosphide – Zinc Oxide Red
Gallium Phosphide – N Green Silicon Carbide – SiC Yellow Gallium Phosphide, P, N Amber
LEDs are produced in a variety of shapes and sizes.
The color of the plastic lens is often the same as the actual color of light emitted, but not always. For instance, purple plastic is often used for infrared LEDs, and most blue devices have colorless housings. Modern high power LEDs such as those used for lighting and backlighting are generally found in surface-mount technology (SMT) packages (not shown).
Advantages & Disadvantages
• Efficiency• Color .• On/Off time.• Cycling.• Dimming.• Cool light.• Slow failure.• Lifetime .• Shock
resistance.• Focus.
• High initial price• Temperature
dependence• Voltage
sensitivity• Light quality• Area light source• Electrical polarity• Blue hazard• Blue pollution• Droop
Advantages Disadvantages
LED Applications
• Display instruments like DVMs• Colourful lights• Produce coherent light with
narrow band width (Laser Diode – used in CD Players & Optical communications)
• Opto-isolator – combination of LED and Photo diode used to reduce electrical interference on signal transmission in a system and used in digital system design and design of medical instruments to reduce risk of electric shock to patients Automotive applications for
LEDs continue to grow
Different sized LEDs. 8 mm, 5 mm and 3 mm, with a wooden match-stick for scale.
LED in its on and off states.
A green surface-mount colored LED mounted on an Arduino circuit board
Semiconductors Symbols