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The saturation current (or scale current), more accurately the reverse saturation current, is the part of the reverse current in a
semiconductor A semiconductor is a material with electrical conductivity between that of a conductor and an insulator. Its conductivity can be modified by adding impurities (" doping") to its crystal structure. When two regions with different doping level ...
diode A diode is a two-Terminal (electronics), terminal electronic component that conducts electric current primarily in One-way traffic, one direction (asymmetric electrical conductance, conductance). It has low (ideally zero) Electrical resistance ...
caused by diffusion of minority carriers from the neutral regions to the depletion region. This current is almost independent of the reverse voltage. The reverse bias saturation current I_\text for an ideal p–n
diode A diode is a two-Terminal (electronics), terminal electronic component that conducts electric current primarily in One-way traffic, one direction (asymmetric electrical conductance, conductance). It has low (ideally zero) Electrical resistance ...
is: : I_\text = q A n_\text^2 \left( \frac \sqrt + \frac \sqrt \right),\, where :q is
elementary charge The elementary charge, usually denoted by , is a fundamental physical constant, defined as the electric charge carried by a single proton (+1 ''e'') or, equivalently, the magnitude of the negative electric charge carried by a single electron, ...
:A is the cross-sectional area :D_\text, D_\text are the
diffusion coefficient Diffusivity, mass diffusivity or diffusion coefficient is usually written as the proportionality constant between the molar flux due to molecular diffusion and the negative value of the gradient in the concentration of the species. More accurate ...
s of holes and electrons, respectively, :N_\text, N_\text are the donor and acceptor concentrations at the n side and p side, respectively, :n_\text is the intrinsic carrier concentration in the semiconductor material, :\tau_\text, \tau_\text are the carrier lifetimes of holes and electrons, respectively. Increase in reverse bias does not allow the majority charge carriers to diffuse across the junction. However, this potential helps some minority charge carriers in crossing the junction. Since the minority charge carriers in the n-region and p-region are produced by thermally generated electron-hole pairs, these minority charge carriers are extremely temperature dependent and independent of the applied bias voltage. The applied bias voltage acts as a forward bias voltage for these minority charge carriers and a current of small magnitude flows in the external circuit in the direction opposite to that of the conventional current due to the movement of majority charge carriers. Note that the saturation current is ''not'' a constant for a given device; it varies with temperature; this variance is the dominant term in the temperature coefficient for a diode. A common rule of thumb is that it doubles for every 10°C rise in temperature.


See also

* Reverse leakage current, the reverse current arising from all causes


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Saturation Current Diodes