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Published byPreston Cameron Modified over 9 years ago
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Graduate Attributes (Southern Cross University, Australia) The graduates of the University are expected to develop the following during their programmes: Intellectual rigour Creativity Ethical understanding, sensitivity, commitment Command an area of knowledge Lifelong learning --- ability of independent & self-directed learning Effective communication and social skills Cultural awareness (From: S. Yeo, CDTLink, NUS, July 2004)
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Importance of Materials Processing All electronic devices & systems are made of materials in various combinations Raw materials are far from the final electronic products Semiconductor materials (e.g., Si, Ge, GaAs, GaN...) used for devices must be of extremely high purity and crystalline order
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Desirable Device Qualities Strong functionality Reliable, long lifetime Low cost, high energy efficiency Small volume, light weight... Examples: your notebook PC, mobile phone… All these require high precision and efficient materials processing technologies
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Real Materials and their Processing Particles, lines and rigid bodies vs. real materials Material-specific properties determine the function and processing details of a material Comprehensive knowledge of materials processing requires ~ 5-10 years of learning and practice Advantage and role of physics students
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Insulators, Conductors, Semiconductors from energy band structures E valence band filled conduction band empty Forbidden region E g > 5eV Band gap E conduction band E g < 5eV Band gap + - electron hole E valence band partially-filled band Insulator Semiconductor Conductor Si: E g = 1.1 eV Ge: E g = 0.75 eV GaAs: E g = 1.42 eV SiO 2 : E g = 9 eV
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Electrons and Holes in Semiconductor Intrinsic semiconductor Carriers come from valence electron excitation Doped semiconductor N type P type Key: Effective control of charge carriers
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Carrier type, density & mobility determined in Hall measurements JxJx B VHVH EyEy Longitudinal conductance: J x = E x = e(n e + p h )E x Longitudinal resistivity: = 1/ The Hall coefficient: If electron is the dominant carrier in the material, then we have: = 1/ = (en e ) -1, and Carrier density: n = -(eR H ) -1, and the mobility: e = - R H /
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Light Emission in Semiconductors E conduction band Band gap + - electron valence band Si: E g = 1.1 eV, = 1100 nm GaAs: E g = 1.4 eV, = 873 nm AlAs: E g = 2.23 eV, = 556 nm hole h Electron-hole recombination Si: indirect bandgap, ineffective GaAs: direct bandgap, effective
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Basic semiconductor devices pn Diode pn Bipolar transistor p E C B Metal-semiconductor contacts p+p+ p+p+ n SD G G Junction field-effect transistor (JFET) p n+n+ n+n+ GSiO 2 Depletion region Metal-oxide-semiconductor FET (MOSFET) Inversion region SD
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Real Device Structures in IC MOSFET Bipolar transistor Diode n n+n+ p metal contacts
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