ECE 340 Lecture 35 : Metal- Semiconductor Junctions Class Outline:

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ECE 340 Lecture 35 : - Junctions Class Outline: Ideal - Contacts Rectifying Contacts Ohmic Contacts

Things you should know when you leave Key Questions What happens to the bands when we make contact between metals and semiconductors? What is a rectifying contact? What is an ohmic contact? How does doping change the operation of an ohmic contact?

Ideal - Contacts We talk a lot about semiconductors, but how do we contact them? We have talked about the effects of electric fields, but how we apply one? Use a metal contact In the ideal case, we assume: The metal and semiconductor are in intimate contact on the atomic scale with no layers of any type between the components. There is no interdiffusion or intermixing of the metal and the semiconductor. There are no adsorbed impurities or surface charges at the MS interface.

Ideal - Contacts What do the band diagrams look like? E 0 We need to understand several key energies in the metal and the semiconductor The topmost energy is the vacuum level, E 0. The difference between the Fermi energy and the vacuum level is the workfunction, Ф. This is a material property of the metal. The semiconductor workfunction is comprised of two properties. The electron affinity, Χ. E c E f which is a function of doping. ( EC EF ) FB Φ S = χ +

Ideal - Contacts Now let s bring the metal and semiconductor together E 0 Ф M Χ Ф S E FS Ф M > Ф S E FM E When the materials are brought into contact with one another, they are not in equilibrium (E FS E FM ). Φ B Ф B = Φ M χ Surface potential energy barrier for electrons. EF Electrons begin moving from the semiconductor to the metal. The net transfer of electrons leaves a reduced electron concentration in the semiconductor and the barrier between the materials grows. E Process continues until Fermi level is constant.

Ideal - Contacts What happens if Ф M < Ф S? Ф M Χ Ф S Ф M < Ф S E FM E FS E When the materials are brought into contact with one another, they are not in equilibrium (E FS E FM ). Electrons begin moving from the metal to the semiconductor. E E F The net transfer of electrons from the metal into the semiconductor leaves a net excess of electrons at the surface. Process continues until Fermi level is constant.

Ideal - Contacts But the point of adding contacts was to apply fields, let s look at this Apply positive bias, Current Ф M > Ф S E FM E E FS This lowers E FM below E FS and reduces the barrier seen by electrons. Current begins to flow from the semiconductor to the metal. Continue to raise the positive bias and more electrons will have enough energy to surmount the barrier and contribute to current flow.

Ideal - Contacts What happens if we apply a negative bias to the contact Apply increasingly negative bias, Current E FM E E FS Ф M > Ф S This lowers E below FS E FM and increases the barrier seen by electrons. Current flow from the semiconductor is blocked by the large potential barrier. Only a small leakage current may flow from the metal to the semiconductor.

Ideal - Contacts What happens when we reverse the relationship between the workfunctions? Positive bias Ф M < Ф S E FS E FM E FM E Current I Current E FS E Negative bias

Ideal - Contacts Let s summarize what we have so far Ф M < Ф S I Ф M > Ф S N- type semiconductor φ M > φ S Rec)fying Ohmic P- type semiconductor φ M < φ S Ohmic Rec)fying

Rectifying Contacts When Ф M < Ф S in an n-type seimconductor the contact is called rectifying Ф M < Ф S A rectifying contact is one in which a forward bias drives a large current but a reverse bias results in a small current. Despite efforts, contacts are not ideal. In Si, exposure to air causes SiO 2 to form before the metal can be deposited. Something similar happens in GaAs too. Surface charges also change the surface potential barrier leading to unexpected behavior.

Rectifying Contacts Surface states cause problems in III- semiconductors Interface states pin the Fermi level at a fixed position regardless of the contact metal. Schottky barrier determined by surface states rather than metal and semiconductor workfunction difference. Effect is different in InAs as any metal becomes ohmic.

Ohmic Contacts The other type of contact is Ohmic I Ф M > Ф S Interface states supplied by majority carrier Ohmic contacts are low impedance contacts that allow current flow regardless of the polarity of the bias. These are very important types of contact, so how do we make them? We know that surface states at the interface can cause significant problems and make all contacts rectifying.

Ohmic Contacts How do you make an ohmic contact? Low Doping n + -Si n-si Moderate Doping SiO 2 To make an ohmic contact to silicon, we need to use clever doping High Doping Low doping all thermionic emission. Moderate doping some thermionic emission and some field emission. High doping Mostly field emission.