Ed Unit 4
Ed Unit 4
Ed Unit 4
RAMAKRISHNAN COLLEGE OF
TECHNOLOGY
DEPARTMENT OF ECE
20EC3103
ELECTRON DEVICES
Introduction
• Electronic devices are components for controlling the flow of electrical
currents for the purpose of information processing and system control.
• Electronic devices are playing a major role in everyday life.
UNIT 4
THEORY OF FET
• FET current is carried by only one type of charge particles, either electrons or
holes. Hence called as Unipolar device(UJT).
FET is simple to fabricate and occupies less
space on a chip than a BJT. About 100000
FETs can be fabricated in a single chip. This
makes them useful in VLSI (very large scale
integrate) system.
CONSTRUCTION OF N-CHANNEL JFET
Heavily doped electrodes of p-type material form p-n junctions on each side of the bar. The
thin region between the two p gates is called the channel. Since this channel is in the n type
bar, the FET in known as n-channel JFET.
The electrons enter the channel through the terminal called SOURCE and leave
through the terminal called DRAIN. The terminals taken out from heavily doped
electrodes of p type material are called GATES.
Usually these electrodes are connected together and only one terminal is taken out,
which is called Gate.
CONSTRUCTION OF P-CHANNEL JFET
The principle of working n-channel JFET and p-channel JFET is similar; the only
difference being that in n-channel JFET the current is carried by electrodes while in p-
channel JFET, it is carried by holes.
OPERATION OF N-CHANNEL JFET
In JFET, the p-n junction between gate and source is always kept in reverse biased
conditions.
Since the current in a reverse biased p-n junction is extremely small, practically
zero.
The gate current in JFET is often neglected and assumed to be zero
Let us consider the circuit in the figure, voltage VDD is applied between drain and source.
Gate terminal is kept open. The bar is of n-type material.
Due to the polarities of applied voltage as shown in the fig, the majority carriers i.e. the
electrons start flowing from the source to the drain.
The flow of electrons makes the drain current, ID.
The majority carriers move from source to drain through the space between the gate
regions.
The space is commonly known as channel.
The width of this channel can be controlled by varying the gate voltage. To see the
effect of gate voltage on channel width and on drain current ID
The Gate and channel constitute a PN junction diode which is reverse biased by the gate to the source
voltage.
A depletion layer is developed in the channel as reverse bias increases the width of depletion layer
increases.
For a fixed drain to source voltage, the drain current will be a function of reverse bias voltage across
the gate junction.
At a gate-to-source voltage VGS=Vp known as the “Pinch- off” voltage which eliminates the
channel, the channel width is reduces to zero.
The term Field Effect is used to describe this device because of mechanism to control current using
reverse bias voltage VGS
OPERATION OF P-CHANNEL JFET
When a positive voltage is applied to the gate, the source-drain current is reduced. As the gate voltage,
VG, becomes more positive, the current lessens and lessens until it completes reaches cutoff, which is
when then JFET is in the Off condition and no current conducts across from source to drain. This stops
all drain-source current flow.
Characteristics of JFET
The characteristics of JFET is defined by a plotting a curve between the drain current and
drain-source voltage.
the characteristics are of two types: output characteristics or drain characteristics, and the
another is transfer characteristics.
In the first case the output characteristics are observed when there is no bias, i.e. there is
no voltage applied between gate and source terminals.
Another condition is that the biasing is applied between gate and source terminals. In
both the condition the variation of drain current is different.
Output Characteristics or Drain Characteristics
1. In the absence of external bias:
There is no voltage between gate and source terminal, thus, the drain current will
flow from drain terminal to source terminal.
The working of JFET that majority charge carriers flow from source to drain and as a
consequence of which the current flows from drain to source.
Terminologies
1. Knee Point
2. Channel Ohmic Region
3. Pinch-off point
4. Pinch-off Voltage
5. Drain-Source Saturation Current
With external bias
Transfer Characteristics
Amplification Factor
Power Dissipation
CURRENT EQUATIONS
The relationship between the drain current and gate to source voltage is non-linear. This
relationship is defined by Shockley’s equation
The n-channel D-MOSFET is a piece of n-type material with a p-type region called
substrate on the right and an insulated gate on the left.
The free electrons flowing from source to drain must pass through the narrow channel
between the gate and the p-type region (i.e. substrate).
A thin layer of metal oxide, usually silicon dioxide (SiO2)
is deposited over a small portion of the channel. A metallic
gate is deposited over the oxide layer.
Since the gate is insulated from the channel, we can apply
either negative or positive voltage to the gate. Therefore, D-
MOSFET can be operated in both depletion-mode and
enhancement-mode.
Electrons flowing from source (when drain is positive w.r.t. source) must pass through this
narrow channel.
If we apply –ve gate voltage , the negative charges on the gate repel conduction electrons
from the channel, and attract holes from the p-type substrate.
The level of recombination between electrons and holes depends on the magnitude of the
negative voltage applied at the gate.
The greater the negative voltage applied at the gate, the greater the depletion n-channel
electrons.
Depletion MOSFET (D-MOSFET)- P-channel