fbpx
Wikipedia

p–n junction

A p–n junction is a boundary or interface between two types of semiconductor materials, p-type and n-type, inside a single crystal of semiconductor. The "p" (positive) side contains an excess of holes, while the "n" (negative) side contains an excess of electrons in the outer shells of the electrically neutral atoms there. This allows electric current to pass through the junction only in one direction. The p- and n-type regions creating the junction are made by doping the semiconductor, for example by ion implantation, diffusion of dopants, or by epitaxy (growing a layer of crystal doped with one type of dopant on top of a layer of crystal doped with another type of dopant).

A p–n junction. The circuit symbol is shown: the triangle corresponds to the p side.

p–n junctions are elementary "building blocks" of semiconductor electronic devices such as diodes, transistors, solar cells, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and integrated circuits; they are the active sites where the electronic action of the device takes place. For example, a common type of transistor, the bipolar junction transistor (BJT), consists of two p–n junctions in series, in the form n–p–n or p–n–p; while a diode can be made from a single p-n junction. A Schottky junction is a special case of a p–n junction, where metal serves the role of the n-type semiconductor.

History edit

The invention of the p–n junction is usually attributed to American physicist Russell Ohl of Bell Laboratories in 1939.[1] Two years later (1941), Vadim Lashkaryov reported discovery of p–n junctions in Cu2O and silver sulphide photocells and selenium rectifiers.[2] The modern theory of p-n junctions was elucidated by William Shockley in his classic work Electrons and Holes in Semiconductors (1950).[3]

Properties edit

 
Silicon atoms (Si) enlarged about 45,000,000x

The p–n junction possesses a useful property for modern semiconductor electronics. A p-doped semiconductor is relatively conductive. The same is true of an n-doped semiconductor, but the junction between them can become depleted of charge carriers, depending on the relative voltages of the two semiconductor regions. By manipulating flow of charge carriers across this depleted layer, p–n junctions are commonly used as diodes: circuit elements that allow a flow of electricity in one direction but not in the other (opposite) direction.

Bias is the application of a voltage relative to a p–n junction region:

The forward-bias and the reverse-bias properties of the p–n junction imply that it can be used as a diode. A p–n junction diode allows charge carriers to flow in one direction, but not in the opposite direction; negative charge carriers (electrons) can easily flow through the junction from n to p but not from p to n, and the reverse is true for positive charge carriers (holes). When the p–n junction is forward-biased, charger carriers flow freely due to the reduction in energy barriers seen by electrons and holes.[4] When the p–n junction is reverse-biased, however, the junction barrier (and therefore resistance) becomes greater and charge flow is minimal.

Equilibrium (zero bias) edit

In a p–n junction, without an external applied voltage, an equilibrium condition is reached in which a potential difference forms across the junction. This potential difference is called built-in potential  .

At the junction, some of the free electrons in the n-type wander into the p-type due to random thermal migration ("diffusion"). As they diffuse into the p-type they combine with holes, and cancel each other out. In a similar way some of the positive holes in the p-type diffuse into the n-type and combine with free electrons, and cancel each other out. The positively charged ("donor") dopant atoms in the n-type are part of the crystal, and cannot move. Thus, in the n-type, a region near the junction has a fixed amount of positive charge. The negatively charged ("acceptor") dopant atoms in the p-type are part of the crystal, and cannot move. Thus, in the p-type, a region near the junction becomes negatively charged. The result is a region near the junction that acts to repel the mobile charges away from the junction through the electric field that these charged regions create. The regions near the p–n interface lose their neutrality and most of their mobile carriers, forming the space charge region or depletion layer (see figure A).

 
Figure A. A p–n junction in thermal equilibrium with zero-bias voltage applied. Electron and hole concentration are reported with blue and red lines, respectively. Gray regions are charge-neutral. Light-red zone is positively charged. Light-blue zone is negatively charged. The electric field is shown on the bottom, the electrostatic force on electrons and holes and the direction in which the diffusion tends to move electrons and holes. (The log concentration curves should actually be smoother with slope varying with field strength.)

The electric field created by the space charge region opposes the diffusion process for both electrons and holes. There are two concurrent phenomena: the diffusion process that tends to generate more space charge, and the electric field generated by the space charge that tends to counteract the diffusion. The carrier concentration profile at equilibrium is shown in figure A with blue and red lines. Also shown are the two counterbalancing phenomena that establish equilibrium.

 
Figure B. A p–n junction in thermal equilibrium with zero-bias voltage applied. Under the junction, plots for the charge density, the electric field, and the voltage are reported. (The log concentration curves should actually be smoother, like the voltage.)

The space charge region is a zone with a net charge provided by the fixed ions (donors or acceptors) that have been left uncovered by majority carrier diffusion. When equilibrium is reached, the charge density is approximated by the displayed step function. In fact, since the y-axis of figure A is log-scale, the region is almost completely depleted of majority carriers (leaving a charge density equal to the net doping level), and the edge between the space charge region and the neutral region is quite sharp (see figure B, Q(x) graph). The space charge region has the same magnitude of charge on both sides of the p–n interfaces, thus it extends farther on the less doped side in this example (the n side in figures A and B).

Forward bias edit

 
PN junction operation in forward-bias mode, showing reducing depletion width.

In forward bias, the p-type is connected with the positive terminal and the n-type is connected with the negative terminal. The panels show energy band diagram, electric field, and net charge density. Both p and n junctions are doped at a 1e15 cm−3 (160 µC/cm3) doping level, leading to built-in potential of ~0.59 V. Reducing depletion width can be inferred from the shrinking carrier motion across the p–n junction, which as a consequence reduces electrical resistance. Electrons that cross the p–n junction into the p-type material (or holes that cross into the n-type material) diffuse into the nearby neutral region. The amount of minority diffusion in the near-neutral zones determines the amount of current that can flow through the diode.

Only majority carriers (electrons in n-type material or holes in p-type) can flow through a semiconductor for a macroscopic length. With this in mind, consider the flow of electrons across the junction. The forward bias causes a force on the electrons pushing them from the N side toward the P side. With forward bias, the depletion region is narrow enough that electrons can cross the junction and inject into the p-type material. However, they do not continue to flow through the p-type material indefinitely, because it is energetically favorable for them to recombine with holes. The average length an electron travels through the p-type material before recombining is called the diffusion length, and it is typically on the order of micrometers.[5]

Although the electrons penetrate only a short distance into the p-type material, the electric current continues uninterrupted, because holes (the majority carriers) begin to flow in the opposite direction. The total current (the sum of the electron and hole currents) is constant in space, because any variation would cause charge buildup over time (this is Kirchhoff's current law). The flow of holes from the p-type region into the n-type region is exactly analogous to the flow of electrons from N to P (electrons and holes swap roles and the signs of all currents and voltages are reversed).

Therefore, the macroscopic picture of the current flow through the diode involves electrons flowing through the n-type region toward the junction, holes flowing through the p-type region in the opposite direction toward the junction, and the two species of carriers constantly recombining in the vicinity of the junction. The electrons and holes travel in opposite directions, but they also have opposite charges, so the overall current is in the same direction on both sides of the diode, as required.

The Shockley diode equation models the forward-bias operational characteristics of a p–n junction outside the avalanche (reverse-biased conducting) region.

Reverse bias edit

 
A silicon p–n junction in reverse bias

Connecting the p-type region to the negative terminal of the voltage supply and the n-type region to the positive terminal corresponds to reverse bias. If a diode is reverse-biased, the voltage at the cathode is comparatively higher than at the anode. Therefore, very little current flows until the diode breaks down. The connections are illustrated in the adjacent diagram.

Because the p-type material is now connected to the negative terminal of the power supply, the 'holes' in the p-type material are pulled away from the junction, leaving behind charged ions and causing the width of the depletion region to increase. Likewise, because the n-type region is connected to the positive terminal, the electrons are pulled away from the junction, with similar effect. This increases the voltage barrier causing a high resistance to the flow of charge carriers, thus allowing minimal electric current to cross the p–n junction. The increase in resistance of the p–n junction results in the junction behaving as an insulator.

The strength of the depletion zone electric field increases as the reverse-bias voltage increases. Once the electric field intensity increases beyond a critical level, the p–n junction depletion zone breaks down and current begins to flow, usually by either the Zener or the avalanche breakdown processes. Both of these breakdown processes are non-destructive and are reversible, as long as the amount of current flowing does not reach levels that cause the semiconductor material to overheat and cause thermal damage.

This effect is used to advantage in Zener diode regulator circuits. Zener diodes have a low breakdown voltage. A standard value for breakdown voltage is for instance 5.6 V. This means that the voltage at the cathode cannot be more than about 5.6 V higher than the voltage at the anode (though there is a slight rise with current), because the diode breaks down, and therefore conduct, if the voltage gets any higher. This, in effect, limits the voltage over the diode.

Another application of reverse biasing is Varactor diodes, where the width of the depletion zone (controlled with the reverse bias voltage) changes the capacitance of the diode.

Governing equations edit

Size of depletion region edit

For a p–n junction, let   be the concentration of negatively-charged acceptor atoms and   be the concentrations of positively-charged donor atoms. Let   and   be the equilibrium concentrations of electrons and holes respectively. Thus, by Poisson's equation:

 

where   is the electric potential,   is the charge density,   is permittivity and   is the magnitude of the electron charge.

For a general case, the dopants have a concentration profile that varies with depth x, but for a simple case of an abrupt junction,   can be assumed to be constant on the p side of the junction and zero on the n side, and   can be assumed to be constant on the n side of the junction and zero on the p side. Let   be the width of the depletion region on the p-side and   the width of the depletion region on the n-side. Then, since   within the depletion region, it must be that

 

because the total charge on the p and the n side of the depletion region sums to zero. Therefore, letting   and   represent the entire depletion region and the potential difference across it,

 

And thus, letting   be the total width of the depletion region, we get

 

  can be written as  , where we have broken up the voltage difference into the equilibrium plus external components. The equilibrium potential results from diffusion forces, and thus we can calculate   by implementing the Einstein relation and assuming the semiconductor is nondegenerate (i.e., the product   is independent of the Fermi energy):

 
where T is the temperature of the semiconductor and k is Boltzmann constant.[6]

Current across depletion region edit

The Shockley ideal diode equation characterizes the current across a p–n junction as a function of external voltage and ambient conditions (temperature, choice of semiconductor, etc.). To see how it can be derived, we must examine the various reasons for current. The convention is that the forward (+) direction be pointed against the diode's built-in potential gradient at equilibrium.

  • Forward current ( )
    • Diffusion current: current due to local imbalances in carrier concentration  , via the equation  
  • Reverse current ( )
    • Field current
    • Generation current

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Riordan, Michael; Hoddeson, Lillian (1988). Crystal Fire: The Invention of the Transistor and the Birth of the Information Age. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 88–97. ISBN 978-0-393-31851-7.
  2. ^ Lashkaryov, V. E. (2008) [1941]. (PDF). Ukr. J. Phys. 53 (special edition): 53–56. ISSN 2071-0194. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-28.
  3. ^ Shockley, William (1950). Electrons and Holes in Semiconductors: With Applications to Transistor Electronics, Bell Telephone Laboratories series, Van Nostrand. ISBN 0882753827, 780882753829.
  4. ^ Mishra, Umesh (2008). Semiconductor Device Physics and Design. Springer. pp. P155. ISBN 978-1-4020-6480-7.
  5. ^ Hook, J. R.; H. E. Hall (2001). Solid State Physics. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-92805-8.
  6. ^ Luque, Antonio; Hegedus, Steven (29 March 2011). Handbook of Photovoltaic Science and Engineering. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-97612-8.

Further reading edit

  • Shockley, William (1949). "The Theory of p-n Junctions in Semiconductors and p-n Junction Transistors". Bell System Technical Journal. 28 (3): 435–489. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1949.tb03645.x.

External links edit

  • The PN Junction. How Diodes Work? (English version) Educational video on the P-N junction.
  • "P-N Junction" – PowerGuru, August, 2012.

junction, also, diode, diode, semiconductor, diodes, boundary, interface, between, types, semiconductor, materials, type, type, inside, single, crystal, semiconductor, positive, side, contains, excess, holes, while, negative, side, contains, excess, electrons,. See also p n diode and Diode Semiconductor diodes A p n junction is a boundary or interface between two types of semiconductor materials p type and n type inside a single crystal of semiconductor The p positive side contains an excess of holes while the n negative side contains an excess of electrons in the outer shells of the electrically neutral atoms there This allows electric current to pass through the junction only in one direction The p and n type regions creating the junction are made by doping the semiconductor for example by ion implantation diffusion of dopants or by epitaxy growing a layer of crystal doped with one type of dopant on top of a layer of crystal doped with another type of dopant A p n junction The circuit symbol is shown the triangle corresponds to the p side p n junctions are elementary building blocks of semiconductor electronic devices such as diodes transistors solar cells light emitting diodes LEDs and integrated circuits they are the active sites where the electronic action of the device takes place For example a common type of transistor the bipolar junction transistor BJT consists of two p n junctions in series in the form n p n or p n p while a diode can be made from a single p n junction A Schottky junction is a special case of a p n junction where metal serves the role of the n type semiconductor Contents 1 History 2 Properties 2 1 Equilibrium zero bias 2 2 Forward bias 2 3 Reverse bias 3 Governing equations 3 1 Size of depletion region 3 2 Current across depletion region 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editThe invention of the p n junction is usually attributed to American physicist Russell Ohl of Bell Laboratories in 1939 1 Two years later 1941 Vadim Lashkaryov reported discovery of p n junctions in Cu2O and silver sulphide photocells and selenium rectifiers 2 The modern theory of p n junctions was elucidated by William Shockley in his classic work Electrons and Holes in Semiconductors 1950 3 Properties editThis article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Silicon atoms Si enlarged about 45 000 000xThe p n junction possesses a useful property for modern semiconductor electronics A p doped semiconductor is relatively conductive The same is true of an n doped semiconductor but the junction between them can become depleted of charge carriers depending on the relative voltages of the two semiconductor regions By manipulating flow of charge carriers across this depleted layer p n junctions are commonly used as diodes circuit elements that allow a flow of electricity in one direction but not in the other opposite direction Bias is the application of a voltage relative to a p n junction region Forward bias is in the direction of easy current flow Reverse bias is in the direction of little or no current flow The forward bias and the reverse bias properties of the p n junction imply that it can be used as a diode A p n junction diode allows charge carriers to flow in one direction but not in the opposite direction negative charge carriers electrons can easily flow through the junction from n to p but not from p to n and the reverse is true for positive charge carriers holes When the p n junction is forward biased charger carriers flow freely due to the reduction in energy barriers seen by electrons and holes 4 When the p n junction is reverse biased however the junction barrier and therefore resistance becomes greater and charge flow is minimal Equilibrium zero bias edit In a p n junction without an external applied voltage an equilibrium condition is reached in which a potential difference forms across the junction This potential difference is called built in potential V b i displaystyle V rm bi nbsp At the junction some of the free electrons in the n type wander into the p type due to random thermal migration diffusion As they diffuse into the p type they combine with holes and cancel each other out In a similar way some of the positive holes in the p type diffuse into the n type and combine with free electrons and cancel each other out The positively charged donor dopant atoms in the n type are part of the crystal and cannot move Thus in the n type a region near the junction has a fixed amount of positive charge The negatively charged acceptor dopant atoms in the p type are part of the crystal and cannot move Thus in the p type a region near the junction becomes negatively charged The result is a region near the junction that acts to repel the mobile charges away from the junction through the electric field that these charged regions create The regions near the p n interface lose their neutrality and most of their mobile carriers forming the space charge region or depletion layer see figure A nbsp Figure A A p n junction in thermal equilibrium with zero bias voltage applied Electron and hole concentration are reported with blue and red lines respectively Gray regions are charge neutral Light red zone is positively charged Light blue zone is negatively charged The electric field is shown on the bottom the electrostatic force on electrons and holes and the direction in which the diffusion tends to move electrons and holes The log concentration curves should actually be smoother with slope varying with field strength The electric field created by the space charge region opposes the diffusion process for both electrons and holes There are two concurrent phenomena the diffusion process that tends to generate more space charge and the electric field generated by the space charge that tends to counteract the diffusion The carrier concentration profile at equilibrium is shown in figure A with blue and red lines Also shown are the two counterbalancing phenomena that establish equilibrium nbsp Figure B A p n junction in thermal equilibrium with zero bias voltage applied Under the junction plots for the charge density the electric field and the voltage are reported The log concentration curves should actually be smoother like the voltage The space charge region is a zone with a net charge provided by the fixed ions donors or acceptors that have been left uncovered by majority carrier diffusion When equilibrium is reached the charge density is approximated by the displayed step function In fact since the y axis of figure A is log scale the region is almost completely depleted of majority carriers leaving a charge density equal to the net doping level and the edge between the space charge region and the neutral region is quite sharp see figure B Q x graph The space charge region has the same magnitude of charge on both sides of the p n interfaces thus it extends farther on the less doped side in this example the n side in figures A and B Forward bias edit See also p n diode Forward bias nbsp PN junction operation in forward bias mode showing reducing depletion width In forward bias the p type is connected with the positive terminal and the n type is connected with the negative terminal The panels show energy band diagram electric field and net charge density Both p and n junctions are doped at a 1e15 cm 3 160 µC cm3 doping level leading to built in potential of 0 59 V Reducing depletion width can be inferred from the shrinking carrier motion across the p n junction which as a consequence reduces electrical resistance Electrons that cross the p n junction into the p type material or holes that cross into the n type material diffuse into the nearby neutral region The amount of minority diffusion in the near neutral zones determines the amount of current that can flow through the diode Only majority carriers electrons in n type material or holes in p type can flow through a semiconductor for a macroscopic length With this in mind consider the flow of electrons across the junction The forward bias causes a force on the electrons pushing them from the N side toward the P side With forward bias the depletion region is narrow enough that electrons can cross the junction and inject into the p type material However they do not continue to flow through the p type material indefinitely because it is energetically favorable for them to recombine with holes The average length an electron travels through the p type material before recombining is called the diffusion length and it is typically on the order of micrometers 5 Although the electrons penetrate only a short distance into the p type material the electric current continues uninterrupted because holes the majority carriers begin to flow in the opposite direction The total current the sum of the electron and hole currents is constant in space because any variation would cause charge buildup over time this is Kirchhoff s current law The flow of holes from the p type region into the n type region is exactly analogous to the flow of electrons from N to P electrons and holes swap roles and the signs of all currents and voltages are reversed Therefore the macroscopic picture of the current flow through the diode involves electrons flowing through the n type region toward the junction holes flowing through the p type region in the opposite direction toward the junction and the two species of carriers constantly recombining in the vicinity of the junction The electrons and holes travel in opposite directions but they also have opposite charges so the overall current is in the same direction on both sides of the diode as required The Shockley diode equation models the forward bias operational characteristics of a p n junction outside the avalanche reverse biased conducting region Reverse bias edit nbsp A silicon p n junction in reverse biasConnecting the p type region to the negative terminal of the voltage supply and the n type region to the positive terminal corresponds to reverse bias If a diode is reverse biased the voltage at the cathode is comparatively higher than at the anode Therefore very little current flows until the diode breaks down The connections are illustrated in the adjacent diagram Because the p type material is now connected to the negative terminal of the power supply the holes in the p type material are pulled away from the junction leaving behind charged ions and causing the width of the depletion region to increase Likewise because the n type region is connected to the positive terminal the electrons are pulled away from the junction with similar effect This increases the voltage barrier causing a high resistance to the flow of charge carriers thus allowing minimal electric current to cross the p n junction The increase in resistance of the p n junction results in the junction behaving as an insulator The strength of the depletion zone electric field increases as the reverse bias voltage increases Once the electric field intensity increases beyond a critical level the p n junction depletion zone breaks down and current begins to flow usually by either the Zener or the avalanche breakdown processes Both of these breakdown processes are non destructive and are reversible as long as the amount of current flowing does not reach levels that cause the semiconductor material to overheat and cause thermal damage This effect is used to advantage in Zener diode regulator circuits Zener diodes have a low breakdown voltage A standard value for breakdown voltage is for instance 5 6 V This means that the voltage at the cathode cannot be more than about 5 6 V higher than the voltage at the anode though there is a slight rise with current because the diode breaks down and therefore conduct if the voltage gets any higher This in effect limits the voltage over the diode Another application of reverse biasing is Varactor diodes where the width of the depletion zone controlled with the reverse bias voltage changes the capacitance of the diode Governing equations editSize of depletion region edit See also Band bending For a p n junction let C A x displaystyle C A x nbsp be the concentration of negatively charged acceptor atoms and C D x displaystyle C D x nbsp be the concentrations of positively charged donor atoms Let N 0 x displaystyle N 0 x nbsp and P 0 x displaystyle P 0 x nbsp be the equilibrium concentrations of electrons and holes respectively Thus by Poisson s equation d 2 V d x 2 r e q e P 0 N 0 C D C A displaystyle frac mathrm d 2 V mathrm d x 2 frac rho varepsilon frac q varepsilon left P 0 N 0 C D C A right nbsp where V displaystyle V nbsp is the electric potential r displaystyle rho nbsp is the charge density e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is permittivity and q displaystyle q nbsp is the magnitude of the electron charge For a general case the dopants have a concentration profile that varies with depth x but for a simple case of an abrupt junction C A displaystyle C A nbsp can be assumed to be constant on the p side of the junction and zero on the n side and C D displaystyle C D nbsp can be assumed to be constant on the n side of the junction and zero on the p side Let d p displaystyle d p nbsp be the width of the depletion region on the p side and d n displaystyle d n nbsp the width of the depletion region on the n side Then since P 0 N 0 0 displaystyle P 0 N 0 0 nbsp within the depletion region it must be thatd p C A d n C D displaystyle d p C A d n C D nbsp because the total charge on the p and the n side of the depletion region sums to zero Therefore letting D displaystyle D nbsp and D V displaystyle Delta V nbsp represent the entire depletion region and the potential difference across it D V D q e P 0 N 0 C D C A d x d x C A C D C A C D q 2 e d p d n 2 displaystyle Delta V int D int frac q varepsilon left P 0 N 0 C D C A right mathrm d x mathrm d x frac C A C D C A C D frac q 2 varepsilon d p d n 2 nbsp And thus letting d displaystyle d nbsp be the total width of the depletion region we getd 2 e q C A C D C A C D D V displaystyle d sqrt frac 2 varepsilon q frac C A C D C A C D Delta V nbsp D V displaystyle Delta V nbsp can be written as D V 0 D V ext displaystyle Delta V 0 Delta V text ext nbsp where we have broken up the voltage difference into the equilibrium plus external components The equilibrium potential results from diffusion forces and thus we can calculate D V 0 displaystyle Delta V 0 nbsp by implementing the Einstein relation and assuming the semiconductor is nondegenerate i e the product P 0 N 0 n i 2 displaystyle P 0 N 0 n i 2 nbsp is independent of the Fermi energy D V 0 k T q ln C A C D P 0 N 0 k T q ln C A C D n i 2 displaystyle Delta V 0 frac kT q ln left frac C A C D P 0 N 0 right frac kT q ln left frac C A C D n i 2 right nbsp where T is the temperature of the semiconductor and k is Boltzmann constant 6 Current across depletion region edit The Shockley ideal diode equation characterizes the current across a p n junction as a function of external voltage and ambient conditions temperature choice of semiconductor etc To see how it can be derived we must examine the various reasons for current The convention is that the forward direction be pointed against the diode s built in potential gradient at equilibrium Forward current J F displaystyle mathbf J F nbsp Diffusion current current due to local imbalances in carrier concentration n displaystyle n nbsp via the equation J D q n displaystyle mathbf J D propto q nabla n nbsp Reverse current J R displaystyle mathbf J R nbsp Field current Generation currentSee also editAlloy junction transistor Capacitance voltage profiling Deep level transient spectroscopy Delocalized electron Diode modelling Field effect transistor n p n transistor p n p transistor Semiconductor detector Semiconductor device Transistor transistor logicReferences edit Riordan Michael Hoddeson Lillian 1988 Crystal Fire The Invention of the Transistor and the Birth of the Information Age W W Norton amp Company pp 88 97 ISBN 978 0 393 31851 7 Lashkaryov V E 2008 1941 Investigation of a Barrier Layer by the Thermoprobe Method PDF Ukr J Phys 53 special edition 53 56 ISSN 2071 0194 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 28 Shockley William 1950 Electrons and Holes in Semiconductors With Applications to Transistor Electronics Bell Telephone Laboratories series Van Nostrand ISBN 0882753827 780882753829 Mishra Umesh 2008 Semiconductor Device Physics and Design Springer pp P155 ISBN 978 1 4020 6480 7 Hook J R H E Hall 2001 Solid State Physics John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 92805 8 Luque Antonio Hegedus Steven 29 March 2011 Handbook of Photovoltaic Science and Engineering John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 97612 8 Further reading editShockley William 1949 The Theory of p n Junctions in Semiconductors and p n Junction Transistors Bell System Technical Journal 28 3 435 489 doi 10 1002 j 1538 7305 1949 tb03645 x External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to PN junction diagrams The PN Junction How Diodes Work English version Educational video on the P N junction P N Junction PowerGuru August 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title P n junction amp oldid 1175391462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.