- Metal-semiconductor junction
Metal-semiconductor junction is a type of
junction in which ametal comes in close contact with asemiconductor material. Similar to ap-n junction , it hasrectifying properties.History
The rectification property of metal-semiconductor contacts was discovered by
Ferdinand Braun in 1874 using mercury metal contacted withcopper andiron sulfide semiconductors.G.W. Pickard received a
patent in 1906 on a point-contact rectifier usingsilicon . In 1907, Pierce published a paper inPhysical Review showing rectification properties ofdiodes made bysputtering many metals on many semiconductors. The use of the metal-semiconductor (M/S) diode rectifier was proposed by Lilienfeld in 1926 in the first of his three transistor patent as the gate of thefield-effect transistor s. The correct theory of the field-effect transistor using a metal/semiconductor gate was advanced by Shockley in 1939.The earlyest M/S diodes in
electronics application occurred in the early 1920's when thecat's whisker rectifiers were used inbroadcast receivers . They consisted of pointed tungsten wire (in the shape of a cat's whisker) whosetip or point is pressed against the surface of alead sulfidecrystal . The first large area rectifier appeares around 1926 which consisted of a copper-oxide semiconductor thermally grown on a coppersubstrate . Subsequently, semiconductor film, such asselenium , wereevaporated onto large metal substrates to form the rectifying M/S diodes. These large-area diodes were used to convert a.c. current to d.c. current in electrical power applications. During 1925-1940, M/S diodes consisting of a pointedtungsten metalwire in contact with a silicon crystal base, were fabricated in laboratories to detectmicrowaves in theUHF range. A World War II program to manufacture high-purity silicon as the crystal base for the point-contact rectifier was suggested byFrederick Seitz in 1942 and successfully undertaken by the Experimental Station of theE. I du Pont de Nemours Company .Theory of metal-semiconductor junction
The first theory that predicted the correct direction of rectification of the metal-semiconductor junction was given by Mott in 1939. He found the solution for both the
diffusion anddrift currents of themajority carriers through the semiconductor surface space charge layer which has been known since about 1948 as the Mott barrier. Schottky and Spenke extended Mott's theory by including a donorion whosedensity is spatially constant through the semiconductor surface layer. This changed the constantelectric field assumed by Mott to a linearly decaying electric field. This semiconductor space-charge layer under the metal is known as theSchottky barrier . A similar theory was also proposed byDavydov in 1939. Although it gives the correct direction of rectification, it has also been proven that the Mott theory and its Schottky-Davydov extension gives the wrong current limiting mechanism and wrong current-voltage formulae in silicon metal/semiconductor diode rectifiers. The correct theory was developed byHans Bethe and reported by him in aM.I.T. Radiation Laboratory Report dated November 23, 1942. In Bethe's theory, the current is limited bythermionic emission ofelectrons over the metal-semiconductor potential barrier. Thus, the appropriate name for the metal/semiconductor diode should be the Bethe diode, instead of theSchottky diode , since the Schottky theory does not predict the modern M/S diode characteristics correctly. ["Fundamentals of Solid-State Electronics", Chih-Tang Sah. World Scientific, first published 1991, reprinted 1992, 1993 (pbk), 1994, 1995, 2001, 2002, 2006, ISBN 9810206372. -- ISBN 9810206380 (pbk).]References
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