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Schottky diode

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Schottky diode schematic symbol

The Schottky diode (named after German physicist Walter H. Schottky; also known as hot carrier diode) is a semiconductor diode with a low forward voltage drop and a very fast switching action.

The cat's-whisker detectors used in the early days of wireless can be considered as primitive Schottky diodes.

Construction

Various Schottky barrier diodes: Small signal rf devices (left), medium and high power Schottky rectifying diodes (middle and right).


A Schottky diode is a special type of diode with a very low forward-voltage drop. When current flows through a diode there is a small voltage drop across the diode terminals. A normal diode has between 0.7-1.7 volt drops, while a Schottky diode voltage drop is between approximately 0.15-0.45 – this lower voltage drop translates into higher system efficiency.

A Schottky diode uses a metal-semiconductor junction as a Schottky barrier (instead of a semiconductor-semiconductor junction as in conventional diodes). This Schottky barrier results in both very fast switching times and low forward voltage drop.

The most important difference between p-n and Schottky diode is reverse recovery time, when the diode switches from non-conducting to conducting state and vice versa. Where in a p-n diode the reverse recovery time can be in the order of hundreds of nanoseconds and less than 100 ns for fast diodes, Schottky diodes do not have a recovery time, as there is nothing to recover from. The switching time is ~100 ps for the small signal diodes, and up to tens of nanoseconds for special high-capacity power diodes. With p-n junction switching, there is also a reverse recovery current, which in high-power semiconductors brings increased EMI noise. With Schottky diodes switching instantly with only slight capacitive loading, this is much less of a concern.

It is often said that the Schottky diode is a "majority carrier" semiconductor device. This means that if the semiconductor body is doped n-type, only the n-type carriers (mobile electrons) play a significant role in normal operation of the device. The majority carriers are quickly injected into the conduction band of the metal contact on the other side of the diode to become free moving electrons. Therefore no slow, random recombination of n- and p- type carriers is involved, so that this diode can cease conduction faster than an ordinary p-n rectifier diode. This property in turn allows a smaller device area, which also makes for a faster transition. This is another reason why Schottky diodes are useful in switch-mode power converters; the high speed of the diode means that the circuit can operate at frequencies in the range 200 kHz to 2 MHz, allowing the use of small inductors and capacitors with greater efficiency than would be possible with other diode types. Small-area Schottky diodes are the heart of RF detectors and mixers, which often operate up to 5 GHz.

The most evident limitations of Schottky diodes are the relatively low reverse voltage rating for silicon-metal schottky diodes, 50 V and below, and a relatively high reverse leakage current. The reverse leakage current, increasing with temperature, leads to a thermal instability issue. This often limits the useful reverse voltage to well below the actual rating, but the diodes are improving. The voltage ratings are now at 200 V.

Since 2001 another important invention was presented by Siemens Semiconductor (now Infineon): a silicon carbide Schottky diode. SiC Schottky diodes have about 40 times lower reverse leakage current compared to silicon schottky diodes and are available in 300 V and 600 V variants. As of 2007 a new 1200 volt 7.5 A variant is sold as 2x2 mm chip for power inverter manufacturers.

Silicon carbide has a high thermal conductivity and temperature has little influence on its switching and thermal characteristics. With special packaging it is possible to have operating junction temperatures of over 500 K, which allows passive radiation cooling in aerospace applications.

Applications

Typical applications of power shottky diodes include discharge-protection for solar cells connected to lead-acid batteries and as rectifiers in switched-mode power supplies; in both cases the low forward voltage leads to increased efficiency. While standard silicon diodes have a forward voltage drop of about 0.7 volts and germanium diodes 0.3 volts, Schottky diodes voltage drop at forward biases of around 1 mA is in the range 0.15 V to 0.46 V, [citation needed] which makes them useful in voltage clamping applications and prevention of transistor saturation. This is due to the higher current density in the Schottky diode.

Schottky diodes can be used in power supply "OR"ing circuits in products that have both an internal battery and a mains adaptor input, or similar. However, the high reverse leakage current presents a problem in this case, as any high-impedance voltage sensing circuit (e.g. monitoring the battery voltage or detecting whether a mains adaptor is present) will see the voltage from the other power source through the diode leakage.

Commonly encountered Schottky diodes include the 1N5817 series 1 A rectifiers. Schottky metal-semiconductor junctions are featured in the successors to the 7400 TTL family of logic devices, the 74S, 74LS and 74ALS series, where they are employed as clamps in parallel with the collector-base junctions of the bipolar transistors to prevent their saturation, thereby greatly reducing their turn-off delays.

Small signal Schottky diodes like the 1N5711, 1N6263 ,1SS106, 1SS108 or the BAT41-43, 45-49 series are widely used in high frequency applications as detectors, mixers and nonlinear elements, and have replaced germanium diodes, rendering them obsolete. They are also suitable for ESD protection of ESD sensitive devices like III-V-semiconductor devices, LASER diodes and, to a lesser extent, exposed lines of CMOS circuitry.

Alternatives

When an even lower forward voltage is desired, or if the reverse-leakage is problematic, a so-called "ideal diode", combining a MOSFET switch and a control circuit, can be used, in an operation mode known as synchronous rectification.

A "super diode" consisting of a pn-diode or Schottky diode and an operational amplifier provides an almost perfect diode characteristic due to the effect of negative feedback, although its use is restricted to frequencies the operational amplifier used can handle.

See also

Schottky barrier

External references