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Licchavi Lyceum

Diode

A diode is a fundamental two-terminal semiconductor device that allows electric current to flow primarily in one direction while blocking current in the opposite direction. Because of this property, it is widely used in rectification, switching, signal detection, and voltage regulation circuits.

Structure of a Diode

A diode is formed by joining P-type semiconductor and N-type semiconductor materials to create a PN junction.

P-region contains holes as majority charge carriers
N-region contains electrons as majority charge carriers

When these regions are joined, a depletion region is formed at the junction due to recombination of electrons and holes. This region acts as a potential barrier that prevents free movement of charge carriers.

 

Symbol and Terminals

A diode has two terminals:

Anode (P-side)
Cathode (N-side)

Current flows from anode to cathode when the diode is forward biased.

Biasing of a Diode

Forward Bias

Forward bias occurs when:

Positive terminal of the battery is connected to the P-region
Negative terminal is connected to the N-region

Effects of forward bias:

• The depletion region narrows
• Barrier potential reduces
• Current flows easily through the diode

Typical forward voltage:

Silicon diode: ≈ 0.7 V
Germanium diode: ≈ 0.3 V

Reverse Bias

Reverse bias occurs when:

Positive terminal is connected to the N-region
Negative terminal is connected to the P-region

Effects of reverse bias:

• The depletion region widens
• Barrier potential increases
• Only a very small leakage current flows

If the reverse voltage becomes very high, breakdown may occur.

Diode Current Equation

The current through a diode is given by the Shockley diode equation:

\[
I = I_s \left(e^{\frac{V}{\eta V_T}} – 1\right)
\]

where

\(I\) = diode current
\(I_s\) = reverse saturation current
\(V\) = applied voltage
\(V_T\) = thermal voltage
\(\eta\) = emission coefficient (typically 1 to 2)

V–I Characteristics of a Diode

The voltage-current characteristics of a diode show how current varies with
applied voltage.

Forward Region

Current increases rapidly after the cut-in voltage.

Reverse Region

Only a small reverse saturation current flows.

Breakdown Region

At a certain reverse voltage, current increases sharply due to
Zener or avalanche breakdown.

Types of Diodes

Common types of diodes include:

Rectifier diode
Zener diode
Light-emitting diode (LED)
Photodiode
Schottky diode
Varactor diode
Tunnel diode

Each type is designed for specific electronic applications.

Applications of Diodes

Diodes are used in many electronic circuits, including:

Rectifiers in power supplies
Signal detection in communication systems
Voltage regulation using Zener diodes
Switching circuits
Light generation in LEDs
RF circuits and mixers

Conclusion

The diode is one of the most basic and widely used semiconductor devices in
electronics. By allowing current to flow in only one direction, it plays a
crucial role in rectification, signal processing, and voltage regulation.
Understanding the structure, operation, and characteristics of diodes is
essential for analyzing and designing electronic circuits in modern
communication and control systems.