Drift-field Transistor
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The drift-field transistor, also called the drift transistor or graded base transistor, is a type of high-speed
bipolar junction transistor A bipolar junction transistor (BJT) is a type of transistor that uses both electrons and electron holes as charge carriers. In contrast, a unipolar transistor, such as a field-effect transistor, uses only one kind of charge carrier. A bipolar ...
having a doping-engineered
electric field An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
in the base to reduce the
charge carrier In physics, a charge carrier is a particle or quasiparticle that is free to move, carrying an electric charge, especially the particles that carry electric charges in electrical conductors. Examples are electrons, ions and holes. The term is used ...
base transit time. Invented by
Herbert Kroemer Herbert Kroemer (; born August 25, 1928) is a German-American physicist who, along with Zhores Alferov, received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2000 for "developing semiconductor heterostructures used in high-speed- and opto-electronics". Kroemer ...
at the Central Bureau of Telecommunications Technology of the German Postal Service, in 1953, it continues to influence the design of modern high-speed bipolar junction transistors. Early drift transistors were made by diffusing the base dopant in a way that caused a higher doping concentration near the emitter reducing towards the collector.Bipolar Transistor. Chenning
/ref> This graded base happens automatically with the double diffused planar transistor (so they aren't usually called drift transistors).Fundamentals of Semiconductor Devices.
/ref>


Similar high speed transistors

Another way to speed the base transit time of this type of transistor is to vary the band gap across the base, e.g. in the SiGe pitaxial baseBJT the base of Si1−ηGeη can be grown with η approx 0.2 by the collector and reducing to 0 near the emitter (keeping the dopant concentration constant).


Applications

Germanium diffused junction transistors were used by IBM in their
Saturated Drift Transistor Resistor Logic The IBM 1620 was announced by IBM on October 21, 1959, and marketed as an inexpensive scientific computer. After a total production of about two thousand machines, it was withdrawn on November 19, 1970. Modified versions of the 1620 were used as ...
(SDTRL), used in the
IBM 1620 The IBM 1620 was announced by IBM on October 21, 1959, and marketed as an inexpensive scientific computer. After a total production of about two thousand machines, it was withdrawn on November 19, 1970. Modified versions of the 1620 were used as ...
. (Announced Oct 1959)


References

{{reflist


External links


''Herb’s Bipolar Transistors'' IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES, VOL. 48, NO. 11, NOVEMBER 2001
PDF needs IEEE subscription
Influence of Mobility and Lifetime Variations on Drift-Field Effects in Silicon-Junction Devices
PDF needs IEEE subscription Transistor types 1953 introductions