Mechanism
Operation
When forward biased, a Schottky diode's voltage drop is much less than a standard silicon diode's, 0.25 V versus 0.6 V. In a standard saturated transistor, the base-to-collector voltage is 0.6 V. In a Schottky transistor, the Schottky diode shunts current from the base into the collector before the transistor goes into saturation. The input current which drives the transistor's base sees two paths, one path into the base and the other path through the Schottky diode and into the collector. When the transistor conducts, there will be about 0.6 V across its base–emitter junction. Typically, the collector voltage will be higher than the base voltage, and the Schottky diode will be reverse biased. If the input current is increased, then the collector voltage falls below the base voltage, and the Schottky diode starts to conduct and shunt some of the base drive current into the collector. The transistor is designed so that its collector saturation voltage () is less than the base–emitter voltage (roughly 0.6 V) minus the Schottky diode's forward voltage drop (roughly 0.2 V). Consequently, the excess input current is shunted away from the base and the transistor never goes into saturation.History
In 1956, Richard Baker described some discrete diode clamp circuits to keep transistors from saturating. The circuits are now known as Baker clamps. One of those clamp circuits used a single germanium diode to clamp a silicon transistor in a circuit configuration that is the same as the Schottky transistor. The circuit relied on the germanium diode having a lower forward voltage drop than a silicon diode would have. In 1964, James R. Biard filed a patent for the Schottky transistor. In his patent the Schottky diode prevented the transistor from saturating by minimizing the forward bias on the collector-base transistor junction, thus reducing the minority carrier injection to a negligible amount. The diode could also be integrated on the same die, it had a compact layout, it had no minority carrier charge storage, and it was faster than a conventional junction diode. His patent also showed how the Schottky transistor could be used in DTL circuits and improve the switching speed of saturated logic designs, such as the Schottky-TTL, at a low cost.See also
* Schottky barrierReferences
{{reflist, refs= {{cite patent , inventor-last=Biard , inventor-first=James R. , title=Unitary Semiconductor High Speed Switching Device Utilizing a Barrier Diode , country-code=US , patent-number=3463975 , publication-date = December 31, 1964 , issue-date = August 26, 1969 {{Citation , last=Baker , first=R. H. , title= Maximum Efficiency Switching Circuits , year= 1956 , url=http://www.dtic.mil/srch/doc?collection=t3&id=AD0096497 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150925061100/http://www.dtic.mil/srch/doc?collection=t3&id=AD0096497 , url-status=dead , archive-date=September 25, 2015 , work = MIT Lincoln Laboratory Report TR-110External links
* http://www.computerhistory.org/semiconductor/timeline/1969-Schottky.html Transistor types