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| United States Patent | 4223332 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4223332.html |
| Inventor(s) | Sittig; Roland (Umiken, CH) |
| Abstract | A thyristor exhibiting improved maximum current rise rates as a result of
the relocation of the ignition front from the edge of the cathode emitter
zone to inner cathode emitter areas. This relocation is effected by
providing a relatively light doping of the anode zone beneath the
thyristor gate and cathode emitter edge, and a relatively higher anode
zone doping opposite and outside of the cathode edge, while not applying
an anode electrode metal coating to the lightly doped area of the anode
zone. The thyristor utilizes cathode emitter short circuit rings arranged
such that the ignition front which occurs at thyristor triggering bypasses
the short circuit ring immediately adjacent the cathode emitter edge,
thereby increasing the thyristor voltage rise velocity, dU/dt. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4223332 |
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Thyristor having an anode transverse field emitter |
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| Publication Date |
September 16, 1980 |
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| Filing Date |
October 11, 1978 |
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| Priority Data |
Dec 21, 1977[CH]15759/77 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed as new and desired to be secured by Letters Patent of the
United States is:
1. In a thyristor formed of a semiconductor body having cathode and anode
major surfaces separated by four zones of alternatingly opposite
conductivity type, with a cathode emitter zone and an anode zone
respectively facing said cathode and anode major surfaces, and cathode
base and anode base zones respectively facing said cathode emitter and
anode zones and each other, wherein portions of said cathode base zone are
brought up through said cathode emitter zone to form emitter
short-circuits in said cathode surface, said thyristor having a gate zone
of a conductivity type opposite to that of said cathode emitter formed in
a portion of said cathode base zone brought up to said cathode surface,
the improvement comprising:
said anode zone having a higher doped area and a lower doped area which are
disposed facing said anode major surface, with the lower doped area
opposite said gate zone such that the orthogonal projection of said lower
doped zone to said cathode surfaces covers at least said gate zone; and,
said cathode emitter zone, said gate zone, and only said higher doped area
of said anode zone coated with a metal electrode for making contact
thereto.
2. A thyristor according to claim 1, wherein said emitter short-circuits
circumscribe said gate zone, further comprising:
said higher doped area of said anode zone disposed opposite that part of
the cathode emitter zone which is outside a polygonal course defined by a
projected connection of the emitter short-circuits closest said gate zone
such that the orthogonal projection of said higher doped area covers said
part of the cathode emitter zone outside said polygonal course.
3. A thyristor according to claim 2, further comprising:
the emitter short-circuits closest to the gate zone forming a continuous
ring.
4. A thyristor according to claim 1, further comprising:
an amplifying gate.
5. A thyristor according to claim 1, further comprising:
a junction gate.
6. A thyristor according to claim 1, wherein the thyristor is a reverse
conducting thyristor.
7. In a thyristor formed of a semiconductor body having cathode and anode
major surfaces separated by four zones of alternatingly opposite
conductivity type, with a cathode emitter zone and an anode zone
respectively facing said cathode and anode major surfaces, and cathode
base and anode base zones respectively facing said cathode emitter and
anode zones and each other, wherein portions of said cathode base zone are
brought up through said cathode emitter zone to form emitter
short-circuits in said cathode surface, said thyristor having a gate zone
of a conductivity type opposite to that of said cathode emitter formed in
a portion of said cathode base zone brought up to said cathode surface,
the improvement comprising:
said anode zone having a higher doped area and a lower doped area which are
disposed facing said anode major surface, with the lower doped area
opposite said gate zone such that the orthogonal projection of said lower
doped zone to said cathode surface covers at least said gate zone;
said cathode emitter zone, said gate zone, and only said higher doped area
of said anode zone coated with a metal electrode for making contact
thereto;
said emitter short-circuits circumscribing said gate zone and
said emitter short circuits being arranged around said gate zone in a
plurality of concentric rings in which a first ring closest to said gate
zone is separated therefrom by a distance R.sub.S1 and a second ring
second closest to said gate zone is separated therefrom by a distance
R.sub.S2, where the difference between R.sub.S2 and R.sub.S1 equals a
distance D;
the higher doped zone of said anode zone having an inner edge the
orthogonal projection of which is closest to said gate zone by a distance
equal to R.sub.S1 +D/2, said higher doped zone having an orthogonal
projection which covers the entire cathode surface outside said distance
equal to R.sub.S1 +D/2; and
said higher doped area of said anode zone disposed opposite that part of
the cathode emitter zone which is outside a polygonal course defined by a
projected connection of the emitter short-circuits closest said gate zone
such that the orthogonal projection of said higher doped area covers said
part of the cathode emitter zone outside said polygonal course.
8. In a thyristor formed of a semiconductor body having cathode and anode
major surfaces separated by four zones of alternatingly oppsite
conductivity type, with a cathode emitter zone and an anode zone
respectively facing said cathode and anode major surfaces, and cathode
base and anode base zones respectively facing said cathode emitter and
anode zones and each other, wherein portions of said cathode base zone are
brought up through said cathode emitter zone to form emitter
short-circuits in said cathode surface, said thyristor having a gate zone
of a conductivity type opposite to that of said cathode emitter formed in
a portion of said cathode base zone brought up to said cathode surface,
the improvement comprising:
said anode zone having a higher doped area and a lower doped area which are
disposed facing said anode major surface, with the lower doped area
opposite said gate zone such that the orthogonal projection of said lower
doped zone to said cathode surfaces covers at least said gate zone;
said cathode emitter zone, said gate zone, and only said higher doped area
of said anode zone coated with a metal electrode for making contact
thereto;
said emitter short-circuits circumscribing said gate zone and
said emitter short circuits being arranged around said gate zone in a
plurality of concentric rings in which a first ring closest to said gate
zone is separated therefrom by a distance R.sub.S1, a second ring second
closest to said gate zone is separated therefrom by a distance R.sub.S2,
where the difference between R.sub.S2 and R.sub.S1 equals a distance D and
other rings outside said second emitter short-circuit ring are separated
therefrom by a distance less than said distance D;
the higher doped zone of said anode zone having an inner edge the
orthogonal projection of which is closest to said gate zone by a distance
equal to R.sub.S1 +D/2, said higher doped zone having an orthogonal
projection which covers the entire cathode surface outside said distance
equal to R.sub.S1 +D/2; and
said higher doped area of said anode zone disposed opposite that part of
the cathode emitter zone which is outside a polygonal course defined by a
projected connection of the emitter short-circuits closest said gate zone
such that the orthogonal projection of said higher doped area covers said
part of the cathode emitter zone outside said polygonal course. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a thyristor, controllable on the cathode side,
with emmitter short-circuits distributed on the cathode surface.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The ignition arrangements used today for thyristors are almost uniformly
based on a suitable structuring of the gate-cathode area. The structure
parameters are known for such arrangements for the setting of the desired
ignition current at a given voltage and current rise velocity (cf., for
example, Hartmann,
IEEE ED-23, August 1976, Pages 912-917). Owing to technological
restrictions and the mutual interrelationship of different
characteristics, these lead, however, to difficulties in practice. In
particular, a compromise must be found between sufficient dU/dt strength
and as high a current rise speed, dI/dt, as possible for the arrangement
of the emitter short-circuits closest to the gate-side cathode edge.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is the object of this invention to create a thyristor with
which it is possible to establish, in a simple manner, the desired
ignition currents as well as the dynamic values for the voltage and
current rise.
This and other objects have been achieved according to this invention by
the fact that the anode zone of the thyristor has, along its anode zone at
the anode major surface, two areas and adjacent to each other of different
doping, that the lower doped area is at least opposite the gate-side edge
area of the cathode emitter and that only the higher doped area is
provided with an anode metal coating.
By means of this measure, it is achieved that no ignition duct is formed,
as in the case of known thyristors, below the gate-side cathode edge but
that the ignition is only effected in the area of the highly doped area
edge on the anode side or in the area of the edge of the metal coating, as
a result of the electrical ohm field as well as the limited injection
capability. This shifting of the ignition duct from the cathode edge to
inner cathode emitter areas results, at a maximum, in still admissible
current rise velocities, dI/dt, which can, at least, be higher by the
factor 2 than in the case with thyristors with a uniformly doped anode
edge zone.
An anode zone structured in this manner can also be applied with other gate
structures, such as amplifying gate and junction gate structures, in an
advantageous way.
The new thyristor has proven to be particularly advantageous in case of
thyristors in which the emitter short-circuits closest to the gate form a
continuous ring. Besides the higher current rise velocity, such thyristors
have a particularly high dU/dt strength. However, in the case of customary
thyristors, the spreading ignition front would be detained at the
short-circuit ring and, thus, the thyristor would be destroyed with a high
dI/dt. On the other hand, in the case of the new thyristor, the
short-circuit ring is skipped by the ignition front owing to the fact that
the hole injection is shifted to the edge of the highly doped area by
means of the transverse field produced on the anode with the ignition.
However, the prerequisite is that the higher doped anode area is opposite
that part of the cathode emitter which is outside the emitter
short-circuit ring.
In order not to change perceptibly the admissible current load of the
thyristor, the diameter of the inner edge of the higher doped anode area
cannot arbitarily be chosen but, preferably, it is opposite those points
of the cathode emitter which are between the emitter short-circuits
closest to the gate and the short-circuits being always next further
towards the outside.
If the individual emitter short-circuits are arranged around the gate
(control electrode) in the form of a ring, then the inner edge of the
higher doped area is, preferably, always opposite those points of the
cathode emitter which are defined by the distance R.sub.S1 +D/2 measured
from the center point of the gate, where R.sub.S1 represents the distance
from the gate to the ring on which the emitter short-circuits closest to
the gate are placed, and D signifies the distance between R.sub.S1 and the
distance R.sub.S2 on which always the next closest ring of emitter
short-circuits are placed.
The thyristor of the invention offers, therefore, an additional degree of
freedom when dimensioning gate structures. The arrangement contains,
additionally, internal ignition-intensification characteristics as has
also the known cathode transverse field emitter (cf. J. Burtscher:
"Thyristors with internal ignition intensification, Dynamic Problems Of
Thyristor Techniques"; VDE-Verlag (Publisher) 1971; pages 128 and on). But
it can also be combined with other known structure, such as, for example,
with an amplifying gate or with a junction gate (cf. also in this case the
above cited paper by J. Burtscher). Finally, the new thyristor design,
especially in connection with the emitter short-circuit ring, can also be
utilized for reverse-conducting thyristors.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
A more complete appreciation of the invention and many of the attendant
advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes better
understood by reference to the following detailed description when
considered in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a top cross-sectional view of a thyristor with an emitter
short-circuit ring being placed symmetrically to the gate (for reasons of
clarity, the contact metal coating of the cathode and of the gate are
omitted);
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken through the thyristor according to
FIG. 1 along the line s-s, in an enlarged representation, and with
cathode, anode and gate contact metal coating;
FIG. 3 is a graph illustrating the doping course for a thyristor according
to FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is a side cross-sectional view taken through a thyristor with a
junction gate.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate
identical or corresponding parts throughout the several views, and more
particularly to FIG. 1 thereof, it is firstly noted that the thyristor
gate has the reference 1, the cathode emitter zone the reference 2, the
emitter short-circuit ring the reference 3 and individual emitter
short-circuit points the reference 4. Between the gate-side emitter zone
edge 5 and the edge of gate 1, a part of the P-basis zone is visible in
which the highly doped (p.sup.+ -) gate 1 is embedded (cf. also FIG. 2).
The distance between the short-circuits 4 closest to the emitter
short-circuit ring 3 and the ring 3 can be larger than the distance
between the emitter short-circuits 4 being placed further towards the
outside.
The zone sequence and the structure of the anode zone 6 as well as the
structure of the contact metal coating of gate, emitter and anode zones
can be noted from FIG. 2. In this instance the anode metal coating is
given the reference 11. The p-doped anode zone 6 has the areas 7 and 8 at
its edge zone on the upper side whereby the concentration of the
disturbance centers is high on the surface of the semiconductor disk in
the area 7 but considerably lower in the area 8.
The edge 9 of the highly doped (p.sup.+ -) area 7, is, in accordance with
the invention, about opposite to those points 10 of the emitter 2 which
are defined by the distance R.sub.S1 +D/2 from the center point of the
gate.
FIG. 3 shows a doping profile (concentration of disturbance centers as a
function of the penetration depth) as it can, for example, be used with
the thyristor of the invention. The thickness of the semiconductor disk of
the thyristor amounts to 450 .mu.m. The concentration of disturbance
centers on the anode-side surface amounts, in the area 7, to about
5.multidot.10.sup.20 atoms/cm.sup.3, in the area 8, to about
5.multidot.10.sup.16 atoms/cm.sup.3. The concentration of disturbance
centers on the cathode-gate-side surface amounts to about 10.sup.20
atoms/cm.sup.3 within the emitter areas (n.sup.+ -doping) as well as in
the emitter short-circuit and gate area (p.sup.+ -doping). The depth of
the respective doping, measured from the cathode-side surface, amounts to
about 15 .mu.m for the gate 1 and the cathode emitter. The lateral
structure (cf. FIG. 1 and 2) has the following values in the case of this
thyristor:
Distance from the center point of the gate to
the edge of the gate (R.sub.P): 1500 .mu.m
the edge of the emitter (R.sub.E): 1800 .mu.m
the center of the short-circuit ring (R.sub.S1): 2300 .mu.m
to the center of the adjacent emitter short circuits (R.sub.S2): 3600 .mu.m
Width of the emitter short-circuit ring (b): 200 .mu.m
diameter of the individual short-circuit hole (d)=200 .mu.m
Diameter of the low-doped area (D.sub.A)=5700 .mu.m
The 18 short-circuit holes 4 closest to the emitter short-circuit ring 3
are uniformly arranged on the ring with the distance R.sub.S2 from the
center point of the gate. The emitter short-circuits 4, being placed
further towards the outside, can have a hexagonal arrangement proceeding
from this ring. In this instance, the distance of the individual emitter
short-circuits 4 from each other shall not amount to more than 1200 .mu.m.
The still admissible current rise velocity, dI/dt, measured with this
thyristor amounted to 300 A/ .mu.s and was thus more than twice as high
than in the case of equally dimensioned thyristors with normal gate
arrangement and equal length of the cathode edge.
FIG. 4 shows an additional design example: A thyristor with a so-called
junction gate, i.e. a gate with n.sup.+ -doping. In this case, the emitter
short-circuit ring 3 is closer to the gate than the gate-side cathode edge
5 whereby a particularly high dU/dt strength is obtained. The doping
profile corresponded essentially with the profile given in FIG. 3. The
following values were obtained for the lateral structure:
Distance from the center point of the gate to
the edge of the gate (R.sub.n) +1500 .mu.m
the p.sup.+ -emitter short circuit ring, inside (Rpi): 1600 .mu.m
the p.sup.+ -emitter short circuit ring, outside (Rpa): 1750 .mu.m
the n.sup.30 -inner cathode edge (R.sub.E): 1800 .mu.m
the center of the next emitter short-circuits (R.sub.S2): 3000 .mu.m
Diameter of the low-doped area (D.sub.A): 4500 .mu.m
Sixteen short-circuit holes are uniformly arranged on the ring with the
radius R.sub.S2. The diameter of an individual short-circuit hole 4
amounts again to 200 .mu..sub.M.
It goes without saying that the invention is not limited to thyristors with
circular-symmetrical gate and emitter structures but it can, for example,
also be utilized with thyristors with a finger-shaped or square gate.
Obviously numerous modifications and variations of the present invention
are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be
understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may
be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.
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Description  |
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