I-V characteristics of a silicon p-n junction diode

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the I-V characteristics of a silicon p-n junction diode, specifically how these characteristics change with temperature (200-400°C) and under illumination with light of photon energy exceeding the semiconductor band gap. The diode equation Id = Is(e^qV/kT - 1) is highlighted as crucial for understanding temperature variation. Photocurrent behavior is noted to be mostly independent of reverse bias, with uncertainty regarding its behavior under forward bias. The user acknowledges the need to post exam-related questions in the homework forum in the future. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of the diode equation and the characteristics of photocurrent in p-n junction diodes.
smn
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Hello all,
I've been tasked with drawing the I-V characteristics of a silicon p-n junction diode and I've managed to do that fine.
Now, I've been tasked with showing how this curve will vary with temperature (200-400 deg.c) and by illumination with light of photon energy greater than the semiconductor band gap.
I've been trwling through the net and some library books but can't find any information relevant to the last two tasks.
Could anyone point me in the right direction or show a link to somewhere that may help?
Regards
smn
 
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You have the diode equation, right? Id = Is(e^qV/kT - 1) The variation with temperature is shown explicitly there. As for the photocurrent, it is mostly independent of reverse bias, but I'm not sure what it is like with a forward biased device. Probably still independent of bias, but I'm not sure. And the photocurrent flows in the reverse direction, from cathode to anode. Look up the diode equation and also look up photodiodes.

BTW, if this is for a homework assignment, we're supposed to post and answer those over in the homework forums.
 
Thanks for your reply Berkemen,

Yes, i do have that equation, i think i was looking at the problem a little too deep!

The tasks that I've been set are from an old exam paper. They're not 'official homeworks' but in future i will post any questions of this type in the homework forum.

Regards

smn
 
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