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Introduction of Diode Equation, including the basic and more general form.

The reason for calling the proportionality constant I sat will become obvious when we consider reverse bias. Let us now make V a negative instead of positive. The applied electric field now adds in the same direction to the built-in field. This means the barrier will increase instead of decrease, and so we have what is shown in . Note that we have marked the barrier height as q V bi V a as before. It is just that now, V a is negative, and so the barrier is bigger.

P-N junction under reverse bias ( V a 0 )

Remember, the electrons fall off exponentially as we move up in energy, so it does not take much of a shift of the bands beforethere are essentially no electrons on the n-side with enough energy to get over the barrier. This isreflected in the diode equation where, if we let V a be a negative number, q V a k T very quickly goes to zero and we are left with

I I sat
Thus, while in the forward bias direction, the current increasesexponentially with voltage, in the reverse direction it simply saturates at I sat . A plot of I as a function of voltage or an I-V characteristic curve might look something like .
Idealized I-V curve for a p-n diode
In fact, for real diodes (ones made from silicon) I sat is such a small value (on the order of 10 -10 amps) that you can not even see it on most common measuring devices (oscilloscope, digital volt meter etc.) and ifyou were to look on a device called a curve tracer (which you will learn more about in Electronic Circuits [ELEC 342]) what you would really see would be something like .
Realistic I-V curve
We see what looks like zero current in the reverse direction,and in fact, what appears to be no current until we get a certain amount of voltage across the diode, after which it veryquickly "turns on" with a very rapidly increasing forward current. For silicon, this "turn on" voltage is about 0.6 to0.7 volts.

Digital volt meters (DVM's) use this characteristic for their"diode check" function. What they do is, when the "red" or positive lead is connected to the p-side (anode, or arrow in thediagram) and the "black" or negative lead is connected to the n-side (cathode, or bar in the diagram) of a diode, the meterattempts to pass (usually) 1 mA of current through the diode. If the 1 mA of current is allowed to flow, the meter thenindicates the amount of forward voltage developed across the diode. If it reads something like 0.673 volts, then you can bepretty sure the diode is OK. Reverse the leads, and the diode is reverse biased, and the meter should read "OL" (overload) orsomething like that to indicate that no current is flowing.

The diode equation is usually approximated by two somewhat simpler equations, depending upon whether the diode is forward orreverse biased:

I 0 V a 0 I sat q V a k T V a 0
For reverse bias, as we said, the current is essentially nil.In the forward bias case, the exponential term quickly gets much larger than unity, and so we can forget the "-1" term in the diode equation . Remember, we said that k T at room temperature had a value of about 1/40 of an eV, so q k T 40 V -1 , this means we can also say for forward bias that
I I sat 40 V a
From this equation it is easy to see that only a small positivevalue for V a is needed in order to make the exponential much greater than unity.

Now let's connect this "ideal diode equation" to the real world. One thing you might ask yourself is "How could I check to see ifan actual diode follows the equation given here ?" As we said, I sat is a very small current, and so trying to do the reverse test is probably not going to be successful.What is usually done is to measure the diode current (and forward voltage) over several orders of magnitude of current.

While the current can vary by many orders of magnitude, the voltage is more or less limited to values between0 and 0.6 to 0.7 volts, not by any fundamental process, but rather simply by the fact that too much forward current willburn up the diode.

If we take the natural log of both sides of the second piece of , we find:

I I sat q V a k T
Thus, a plot of I as a function of V a should yield a straight line with a slope of q k T , or 40.

Well, I went into the lab, grabbed a real diode and made some measurements. is a plot of the natural log of the current as a function of voltage from 0.05 to 0.70volts. Included with this plot, is a linear curve fit to the data which is plotted as a dotted line. The linear fit goesthrough the data points quite nicely, so the current is surely an exponential function of the applied voltage! From theexpression for the best fit, which is printed above the graph, we see that I sat -19.68 . That means that I sat -19.68 2.89 -9 amps, which is indeed a very small current. Look at the slope however. Its supposed to be 40, and yet it turns outto be slightly more than 20! This comes about because of some complex details of exactly what happens to the electronsand holes when they cross the junction. In what is called the diffusion dominated situation electrons and holes are injected across the junction, after which they diffuse awayfrom the junction, and also recombine, until eventually they are all gone. This is shown schematically in . The other regime is called recombination dominated and here, the majority of the current is made up of the electrons and holes recombiningdirectly with each other at the junction. This is shown in . For recombination dominated diode behavior, it turns out that the current is given by

I I sat q V a 2 k T
Plot showing I as a function of V a for a 1N4123 silicon diode
Diffusion dominated diode behavior
Recombination dominated diode behavior
In general, aparticular diode might have a combination of these two effects going on, and so people often use a more generalform for the diode equation:
I I sat q V a n k T
where n is called the ideality factor and is a number somewhere between 1 and 2. For the diode which gave the data for our example n 1.92 and so most of the current is dominated by recombination of electrons and holes in the depletion region.

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Source:  OpenStax, Introduction to physical electronics. OpenStax CNX. Sep 17, 2007 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10114/1.4
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