Recitation 2: Equilibrium Electron and Hole Concentration From Doping
Recitation 2: Equilibrium Electron and Hole Concentration From Doping
Recitation 2: Equilibrium Electron and Hole Concentration From Doping
3. Thermal Equilibrium
3 Thermal Equilibrium
A concept which will be used very often. Thermal equilibrium is dened as steady state +
no extra energy source. Note that we have generation or recombination under thermal equi-
librium. It is just that the two rates are equal and cancel each other, so the concentrations
of e & h do not change. n o and p o refer to concentrations in thermal equilibrium.
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Recitation 2 Equilibrium and Doping 6.012 Spring 2009
A is a constant, T is in Kelvin, T (K) = 273 + T( C), and kB = 8.62 105 eV/K. EG is the
Bandgap energy of the semiconductor - it also corresponds to the ease of bond breakage.
For Si, EG = 1.12 eV.
Example 1
At room temperature, T = 300 K, ni (300 K) = 1 1010 cm3 . What is ni (500 C)?
ni (500 C) = ni (773 K)
EG
3/2
ni (773 K) 773 e 2kB (773) e8.4
= = 4.14 21.65 = 3.5 106
ni (300 K) 300 EG e
e 2kB (300)
Therefore, ni (773 K) = 3.5 106 ni (300 K) = 3.5 106 1010 cm3 = 3.5 1016 cm3
Something to observe:
At room temperature, no = po = 1010 cm3 for Si. Atomic density is 5 1022 cm3 . There-
1010 1
fore, only a tiny fraction of atoms ( = = 2 1011 %) lose an electron in
5 1022 5 1012
one of their 4 bonds. By heating up to 500 C, the concentration of free carriers goes up
106 (1 million) times, but the percentage is still quite low.
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Recitation 2 Equilibrium and Doping 6.012 Spring 2009
free electrons
generated by As
p type dopants: B
have one less electron, will grab one
easily from another place, become
negatively charged and thus generate a hole
Acceptor concentration Na (cm-3)
Charge neutrality
Although foreign atoms are introduced in Si, the overall semiconductor is charge neutral.
Therefore, concentration of positive charges = concentration of negative charges. The pos-
itive charges include holes (p) and donors (Nd ). The negative charges include electrons (n)
and acceptors (Na ).
po + N d n o N a = 0
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Recitation 2 Equilibrium and Doping 6.012 Spring 2009
Example 2
Boron doping, dopant concentration 1017 cm3 .
At R.T. under thermal equilibrium Nd =? Na =? no =? po =? ni =? p or n type?
ni = 1010 cm3 at R.T. under thermal equilibrium (material property, doping does not matter)
po Na = 1017 cm3 (because Na ni )
1020 cm6
no po = 1020 cm6 , no = 17 3 = 103 cm3
10 cm
Example 3
Si at 500 C, with As doping 1018 cm3 , extrinsic or intrinsic?
Example 4
A semiconductor can have both dopings. If Na = 1015 cm3 , Nd = 1019 cm3 = n-type
Si, no po even though we have Na = 1015 cm3 .
When things get complicated, the following relations always work:
po + N d no N a = 0
no po = n2i (T )
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Recitation 2 Equilibrium and Doping 6.012 Spring 2009
no po = n2i (T )
n2i (T )
= no =
po
plug into charge neutrality
n2i (T )
po + Nd Na = 0
po
p2o Na po n2i = 0
Na Na 4n2 (T )
po = 1+ i 2
2 2 Na
discard, otherwise po < 0
Na Na 4n2 (T )
= po = + 1+ i 2
2 2 Na
4n2i (T )
po Na is a good approximation since Na2
1
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