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ECE 662 Microwave Devices Microwave Materials, Diodes and Transistors February 3, 2005 Two-Terminal Negative Resistance Devices Varactor – small pn diodes that are operated as nonlinear capacitors In the reverse bias region Application of Negative Resistance Devices Non Reciprocal Multiport Device The 2 - port has a positive real characteri stic impedance R 0 Z L Z0 R L R 0 - R R0 Reflection coefficien t, Γ when R L R , , Z L Z0 R L R 0 - R R0 If R R 0 , then so acts like an oscillator or amplifier with infinite gain. Advantage Simple, easy to fabricate (usually GaAs (larger bandgap voltage) Disadvanta ge Low power outputs, mW, low efficiency ( 2%), up as high as 100GHz demonstrat ed Varactor • Varactor = Variable reactor • Use of voltage-variable properties (such as capacitance) of reversed-biased p-n junctions • Reverse biased depletion capacitance is given by Cj ~ (Vb + VR)-n or Cj ~ (VR)-n for VR >> Vb, where n = ⅓ for a linearly graded junction and n = ½ for an abrupt junction. • Can further increase the voltage sensitivity by using a hyperabrupt junction having an exponent n greater than ½. Charge Depletion Regions 2V d 2V 2 In p - type material region (x 0) 2 dx dx eN a 2 d 2V - eN a dV eN a -eNa x C V x C1 x C2 1 2 dx dx 2 eN a dV boundary conditions : V(x 0) 0 C 2 0 & 0 C1 X1 dx x X 1 repeat for n - type material with eN d also at x -X1 V -V1 and at x X 2 V V2 V1 eN a 2 eN d 2 X 1 and V2 X2 2 2 Charge Depletion Regions e Contact Potential VB V1 V2 (N a X 12 N d X 22 ) 2 but N a X 1 N d X 2 (charge equality) 2VB X1 eN a (1 N a / N d ) 1/2 2VB & X2 eN d (1 N d / N a ) kT N a N d also VB ln 2 ; n i 1.45 1010 cm 3 e ni @ room temp for Si, charge separation capacitanc e 1/ 2 dQ eN a N d 1/2 per unit area, C V , T dV 2( N a N d ) VT VB V, where V is negative for reverse bias. 1/2 Varactor • Present applications mostly for harmonic generation at millimeter and sub millimeter wave frequencies and tuning elements in various microwave applications. • A common varactor is the reversed biased Schottky diode. • Advantages: low loss and low noise. • Produces only odd harmonics when a sinusoidal signal is applied, so a frequency tripler can be realized without any second harmonic. Varactor Dynamic Cutoff Frequency ( an important figure of merit) : 1 / Cmin 1 / Cmax fc , where R s is the 2Rs series resistance Typical value of f c for a state of the art varactor is 1 THz. Varactor Frequency Multipliers • Provide LO power to sensitive millimeter and sub-millimeter wavelengths receivers. • Schottky doublers can deliver 55 mW at 174 GHz • Heterostructure Barrier Varactor Diodes acting as triplers deliver about 9mW at 248 GHz. Crossed Waveguide Frequency Multiplier Ref. Golio Varactor Devices • Lower frequencies: reversed biased semiconductor abrupt p+-n juction diodes made from GaAs or Si. • Higher frequencies: Schottky diodes (metalsemiconductor junction diodes • High frequencies and power handling: heterostructure barrier varactor – several barriers stacked epitaxially Tunnel Diode • To achieve microwave capability – Device dimensions must be reduced – Parasitic capacitance and resistance must be minimized. • Tunnel diode – Associated with a quantum tunneling phenomenon – Tunneling time is very short permitting its use well into the millimeter region – Used for low power microwave application • Local oscillator, detectors, mixers, frequency locking circuit • Low cost, light weight, high speed, low-power operation, low noise Tunnel Diode • In classical case, particle is reflected if E< potential barrier height of V0 • In quantum case particle has a finite probability to transmit or “tunnel” the potential barrier • Single p-n junction which has both p & n sides heavily dopeddepletion regions very narrow and tunneling distance is small ~ 50 to 100 Å – (1 Å =10-8 cm=10-4 m) – High dopings cause Fermi levels within allowable bands p-n junction Tunnel Diode - abrupt junctions of heavily doped p & n semiconductor material p~n~1019 Tunnel Diode • 1) For zero bias - electrons tunneled through narrow barrier at equal rates in each direction. Net current zero. • 2) Small forward bias - electrons at bottom of conductor band on n side are are raised to energy levels corresponding to unoccupied energy levels on the p side. Therefore, tunneling current in forward direction with increases with bias. Tunnel Diode • 3) For still larger bias, more and more electrons are raised to levels lying opposite the forbidden band on p side to which to which no tunneling is possible therefore the current reduces with increasing bias. • 4) As bias increases further, the current remains small until minority carrier injection similar to conventional diodes predominates. Tunnel Diode • 5) with reverse as an increasing number of electrons on the p side find themselves opposited allowed and empty levels in the conduction band on the n side therefore tunneling increases rapidly with increasing bias. Application of Negative Resistance Devices Note negative resistance Values of I p and I v determine the magnitude of the negative resistance . I p /I v figure of merit for tunnel diode. Empirical form for I - V characteri stic is given by V V I Ip exp 1 I 0 V V p p 1 V Ip V dI R 1 exp 1 dV V p V p V p low cost, light weig ht, high speed, low power operation, low noise, high frequency (up to 100 GHz) - very low output power (few mW) 1 Tunnel Diode Note that small changes in VB result in large changes in i hence VRL Negative Resistance Devices I & V, 180 out of phase I2R power absorbed, but if R –R then power generated Summary of Tunnel Diode • • • • Quantum Tunneling Phenomena Tunneling time short - mm waves Low-power applications n-p sides so heavily doped that the fermi levels lie within the conduction and valence bands • Good for extreme speed • Rate of tunneling can change as fast as energy levels can be shifted • Devices such as transistors give more power, but traditionally have suffered in speed due to rate of diffusion of charge changing. Solid-State Device Power Output vs Frequency ref: Sze and modified by Tian Transistors • Bipolar (Homojunction) – Inexpensive, durable, integrative, relatively high gain • Bipolar (Heterojunction) – High speed switching • Field Effect Transistors – Junction – MESFET, MOSFET, High Electron Mobility (HEMT) – Av as well as Qc, better efficiency, lower noise figure, higher speed, high input impedance pnp transistor with all leads grounded ref. Sze pnp transistor in the active mode of operation ref. Sze Various current components in a p-n-p transistor under the active mode of operation. ref. Sze Bipolar Transistor – Gain (f) G( f ) G0 1/ 2 2 G0 f 1 k f max 4 , G0 low frequency gain 2 f max , k ~ 0.2 to 0.3 @high frequency G(f) ~ k f 2 0 f f max 8rbCc 0 dc common derived in terms of emitter to collector signal delay tran sit time, ec base current gain f 1 /( 2ec ), rb base spreading resistance Cc collector depletion layer capacitanc e ec e b x c re emitter resistance of forward - biased Ce depletion layer capacitanc e across base - emitter Bipolar Transistor – Gain (f) – cont. b W 2 /(3.5Deb ) Diffusion - limited transit t ime of carriers b through t he base width W b Deb diffusion constant of emitter injected electrons in the base x Wc /( 2vs ) transit time of carriers through t he base - collector depletion region. Wc width of base - collector depletion region v s saturation velocity of electrons ~ 8 10 6 cm/sec c rc Cc collector depletion layer charging time rc resistance associated with the undepleted region of the collector Cc collector - base depletion layer capacitanc e Bipolar Transistor – High Freq. rb b (W s) /( wb ) b average resistivit y of undepleted part of base (width w b ) Cc (W s)C0 C0 collector capacitanc e/unit area Bipolar Transistor – Gain (f) 1/ 2 2 0w b wb 1 , ec b f max 4 (W s ) ec bC0 nD eb 1 f max 1/ 2 , typically strip widths 1m; w b 0.15m, wb v f :; for L 3m, f 3 GHz or 2L for L 25m, f 400 MHz Field-Effect Transistors • Advantages – 1) Voltage gain and current gain (simultaneously) – 2) Higher efficiency compared to bipolar – 3) Lower Noise Figure – 4) Higher fmax and consequently higher operating frequency – 5) High input resistance, up to several Meg Field-Effect Transistors V is changed by Vgs – to change channel size {reverse bias between Source and gate to adjust channel forward bias between source and Drain for current flow (majority carrier)} d 2V qN dV qN dV ( y a ) b.c. 0 at y a 2 dy dy dy 2 qN qNa 2 V ( y 2ay ) b.c. V 0 at y 0 V y a V p pinch - off 2 2 voltage, where a width of channel ~ 0.15m and N doping of channel, Like 2 vs 1 f max bipolar, G ~ k where, L/v s gate transit t ime, ; f max ~ 2 2L f L gate length, v s saturation drift velo city ~ 2 107 @ E 3kV/cm, ( GaAs) v s ~ 8 106 @ E 15 kV/cm (Si) Field-Effect Transistors 32 For GaAs f max L(Gate length in microns) Key is larger saturation velocity for GaAs f max ~ 60 GHz GaAs FET Bipolar Xtr. Gain 20 – 40 dB ~10 dB BW Several GHz Several 1/10 GHz Power Out 0.5 to 5 W 20 W fmax ~ 8 GHz ~ 3 GHz Pfmax2 ~ 3x1020 WHz2 ~ 2x1020 WHz2 Field-Effect Transistors • To get larger output powers – use larger gate widths – ~ 1W / 1 mm gate width • Single gate width ~ 250 to 500 m • Use multiple gates (~12) to increase power Technology Alternatives - 1 Ref: MPD, Nov 2002, Amcom Communications • Material technologies (GaAs, Si, SiGe) • Process technologies (Epitaxy, Implant) • Device technologies (BJT, HBT, MESFET, HEMT) • Power levels less than 1 W – BJT, HBT (use single polarity supply and offer cost advantages at these power levels) – GaAs, MESFET’s, pHEMT’s (better linearity and efficiency) Technology Alternatives - 2 Ref: MPD, Nov 2002, Amcom Communications • High power levels above 10 W – Si LDMOS (attractive at frequencies below 2 GHz) – Wide band gap devices such as SiC, MESFET’s, GaN, HEMT’s (higher power, higher voltage and promising linearity performance) Terrestrial wireless systems Ref: MPD, Nov 2002, Amcom Communications Broadband internet access – operate in the frequency range of 1 – 6 GHz. Low cost subscriber units: less than 1 W transmit power: SiGe, GaAs HBT, MESFET and pHEMT MMIC’s. Higher power (2-10 W) GaAs FTE, pHEMT (optimize RF power output and best linearity performance over the specific band of interest while keeping the cost low)