Zener diode
A Zener diode is a diode which allows current to flow in the
forward direction in the same manner as an ideal diode, but also permits it to
flow in the reverse direction when the voltage is above a certain value known
as the breakdown voltage, "Zener knee voltage", "Zener
voltage", "avalanche point", or "peak inverse
voltage".
The device was named after Clarence Zener, who discovered
this electrical property. Strictly speaking, a Zener diode is one in which the
reverse breakdown is due to electron quantum tunnelling under high electric
field strength—theZener effect. However, many diodes described as
"Zener" diodes rely instead onavalanche breakdown as the mechanism.
Both types are used with the Zener effect predominating under 5.6 V and
avalanche breakdown above. Common applications include providing a reference
voltage for voltage regulators, or to protect other semiconductor devices from
momentary voltage pulses.
Contents
1 Operation
1.1
Waveform clipper
1.2
Voltage shifter
1.3
Voltage regulator
2
Construction
2.1
Surface Zeners
2.2
Subsurface Zeners
3 Uses
4 See
also
5
References
6
Further reading
Operation
A conventional solid-state diode allows significant current
if it is reverse-biasedabove its reverse breakdown voltage. When the reverse
bias breakdown voltage is exceeded, a conventional diode is subject to high
current due to avalanche breakdown. Unless this current is limited by
circuitry, the diode may be permanently damaged due to overheating. A Zener
diode exhibits almost the same properties, except the device is specially
designed so as to have a reduced breakdown voltage, the so-called Zener
voltage. By contrast with the conventional device, a reverse-biased Zener diode
exhibits a controlled breakdown and allows the current to keep the voltage
across the Zener diode close to the Zener breakdown voltage. For example, a
diode with a Zener breakdown voltage of 3.2 V exhibits a voltage drop of very
nearly 3.2 V across a wide range of reverse currents. The Zener diode is
therefore ideal for applications such as the generation of a reference voltage
(e.g. for an amplifier stage), or as a voltage stabilizer for low-current
applications.[1]
Another mechanism that produces a similar effect is the
avalanche effect as in theavalanche diode.[1] The two types of diode are in
fact constructed the same way and both effects are present in diodes of this
type. In silicon diodes up to about 5.6 volts, the Zener effect is the
predominant effect and shows a marked negative temperature coefficient. Above
5.6 volts, the avalanche effect becomes predominant and exhibits a positive
temperature coefficient.[2]
In a 5.6 V diode, the two effects occur together, and their
temperature coefficients nearly cancel each other out, thus the 5.6 V diode is
useful in temperature-critical applications. An alternative, which is used for
voltage references that need to be highly stable over long periods of time, is
to use a Zener diode with a temperature coefficient of +2 mV/°C (breakdown
voltage 6.2–6.3 V) connected in series with a forward-biased silicon diode (or
a transistor B-E junction) manufactured on the same chip.[3] The forward-biased
diode has a temperature coefficient of -2 mV/°C, causing the TCs to cancel out.
Modern manufacturing techniques have produced devices with
voltages lower than 5.6 V with negligible temperature coefficients,[citation
needed] but as higher-voltage devices are encountered, the temperature
coefficient rises dramatically. A 75 V diode has 10 times the coefficient of a
12 V diode.
Zener and avalanche diodes, regardless of breakdown voltage,
are usually marketed under the umbrella term of "Zener diode".
Waveform clipper
Two Zener diodes facing each other in series will act to
clip both halves of an input signal. Waveform clippers can be used to not only
reshape a signal, but also to prevent voltage spikes from affecting circuits
that are connected to the power supply.[4]
Voltage shifter
A Zener diode can be applied to a circuit with a resistor to
act as a voltage shifter. This circuit lowers the input voltage by a quantity
that is equal to the Zener diode's breakdown voltage.
Voltage regulator
A Zener diode can be applied to a circuit to regulate the
voltage applied to a load, such as in a linear regulator.
Construction
The Zener diode's operation depends on the heavy doping of
its p-n junction. The depletion region formed in the diode is very thin (<1
µm) and the electric field is consequently very high (about 500 kV/m) even for
a small reverse bias voltage of about 5 V, allowing electrons to tunnel from
the valence band of the p-type material to the conduction band of the n-type
material.
In the atomic scale, this tunneling corresponds to the
transport of valence band electrons into the empty conduction band states; as a
result of the reduced barrier between these bands and high electric fields that
are induced due to the relatively high levels of dopings on both sides.[2] The
breakdown voltage can be controlled quite accurately in the doping process.
While tolerances within 0.07% are available, the most widely used tolerances
are 5% and 10%. Breakdown voltage for commonly available Zener diodes can vary
widely from 1.2 volts to 200 volts.
Surface
Zeners
The emitter-base junction of a bipolar NPN transistor
behaves as a Zener diode, with breakdown voltage at about 6.8 V for common
bipolar processes and about 10 V for lightly doped base regions in BiCMOS
processes. Older processes with poor control of doping characteristics had the
variation of Zener voltage up to ±1 V, newer processes using ion implantation
can achieve no more than ±0.25 V. The NPN transistor structure can be employed
as a surface Zener diode, with collector and emitter connected together as its
cathode and base region as anode. In this approach the base doping profile
usually narrows towards the surface, creating a region with intensified
electric field where the avalanche breakdown occurs. The hot carriersproduced
by acceleration in the intense field sometime shoot into the oxide layer above
the junction and become trapped there. The accumulation of trapped charges can
then cause 'Zener walkout', a corresponding change of the Zener voltage of the
junction. The same effect can be achieved by radiation damage.
The emitter-base Zener diodes can handle only smaller
currents as the energy is dissipated in the base depletion region which is very
small. Higher amount of dissipated energy (higher current for longer time, or a
short very high current spike) causes thermal damage to the junction and/or its
contacts. Partial damage of the junction can shift its Zener voltage. Total
destruction of the Zener junction by overheating it and causing migration of
metallization across the junction ("spiking") can be used
intentionally as a 'Zener zap' antifuse.[5]
Subsurface Zeners
A subsurface Zener diode, also called 'buried Zener', is a
device similar to the Surface Zener, but with the avalanche region located
deeper in the structure, typically several micrometers below the oxide. The hot
carriers then lose energy by collisions with the semiconductor lattice before
reaching the oxide layer and cannot be trapped there. The Zener walkout
phenomenon therefore does not occur here, and the buried Zeners have voltage
constant over their entire lifetime. Most buried Zeners have breakdown voltage
of 5–7 volts. Several different junction structures are used.[6]
Uses
Zener diodes are widely used as voltage references and as
shunt regulators to regulate the voltage across small circuits. When connected
in parallel with a variable voltage source so that it is reverse biased, a
Zener diode conducts when the voltage reaches the diode's reverse breakdown
voltage. From that point on, the relatively low impedance of the diode keeps
the voltage across the diode at that value.[7]
In this circuit, a typical voltage reference or regulator,
an input voltage, UIN, is regulated down to a stable output voltage UOUT. The
breakdown voltage of diode D is stable over a wide current range and holds UOUT
relatively constant even though the input voltage may fluctuate over a fairly
wide range. Because of the low impedance of the diode when operated like this,
resistor R is used to limit current through the circuit.
In the case of this simple reference, the current flowing in
the diode is determined using Ohm's law and the known voltage drop across the
resistor R;
The value of R must satisfy two conditions :
1. R must be
small enough that the current through D keeps D in reverse breakdown. The value
of this current is given in the data sheet for D. For example, the common
BZX79C5V6[8] device, a 5.6 V 0.5 W Zener diode, has a recommended reverse
current of 5 mA. If insufficient current exists through D, then UOUT is
unregulated and less than the nominal breakdown voltage (this differs to
voltage-regulator tubes where the output voltage will be higher than nominal
and could rise as high as UIN). When calculating R, allowance must be made for
any current through the external load, not shown in this diagram, connected
across UOUT.
2. R must be
large enough that the current through D does not destroy the device. If the
current through D is ID, its breakdown voltage VB and its maximum power
dissipation PMAX correlate as such: .
A load may be placed across the diode in this reference
circuit, and as long as the Zener stays in reverse breakdown, the diode
provides a stable voltage source to the load. Zener diodes in this
configuration are often used as stable references for more advanced voltage
regulator circuits.
Shunt regulators are simple, but the requirements that the
ballast resistor be small enough to avoid excessive voltage drop during
worst-case operation (low input voltage concurrent with high load current)
tends to leave a lot of current flowing in the diode much of the time, making
for a fairly wasteful regulator with high quiescent power dissipation, only
suitable for smaller loads.
These devices are also encountered, typically in series with
a base-emitter junction, in transistor stages where selective choice of a
device centered around the avalanche or Zener point can be used to introduce
compensating temperature co-efficient balancing of the transistor p–n junction.
An example of this kind of use would be a DC error amplifier used in a regulated
power supply circuit feedback loop system.
Backward diode
The
schematic symbol for the backward diode,[dubious – discuss][1]annotated to show
which side is P type and which is N; current flows most easily from N to P,
backward relative to the arrow.
In
semiconductor devices, a backward diode (also called back diode[2]) is a
variation on aZener diode or tunnel diode having a better conduction for small
reverse biases (for example –0.1 to –0.6 V) than for forward bias voltages.
The reverse
current in such a diode is by tunneling, which is also known as the tunnel
effect.[3][4][5]
Current–voltage
characteristics of backward diode[edit]
Band diagram
of a backward diode. Electron energy is on the vertical axis, position within
the device is on the horizontal axis. The backward diode has the unusual
property that the so-called reverse bias direction actually has more current
flow than the so-called forward bias.
The forward
I–V characteristic is the same as that of an ordinary P–N diode. The breakdown
starts when reverse voltage is applied. In the case of Zener breakdown, it
starts at a particular voltage. In this diode the voltage remains relatively
constant (independent of current) when it is connected in reverse bias. The backward
diode is a special form of tunnel diode in which the tunneling phenomenon is
only incipient, and the negative resistance region virtually disappears. The
forward current is very small and becomes equivalent to the reverse current of
a conventional diode



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