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Mechanism of efficient and stable surface-emitting cold cathode based on porous polycrystalline silicon films
101
Citations
14
References
1999
Year
Materials ScienceSemiconductorsElectrical EngineeringElectronic DevicesEngineeringElectronic MaterialsPorous PolysiliconNanoporous MaterialSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsElectron EmissionSemiconductor Device FabricationOptoelectronic DevicesVacuum DevicePps DiodeSemiconductor Device
It is demonstrated that a porous polysilicon (PPS) diode with a structure of Au/PPS/n-type Si operates as an efficient stable surface-emitting cold cathode. 1.5 μm of an nondoped polysilicon layer is formed on an n-type (100) silicon wafer and anodized in a solution of HF (50%): ethanol=1:1 at a current density of 10 mA/cm2 for 30 s under illumination by a 500 W tungsten lamp from a distance of 20 cm. Subsequently, a PPS layer is oxidized in a rapid thermal oxidation furnace for 1 h at a temperature of 700 °C. A semitransparent thin Au film (about 10 nm thick) is deposited onto the PPS layer as a positive electrode and an ohmic contact is formed at the back side of the silicon wafer as a negative electrode. When a positive bias is applied to the Au electrode in vacuum, the diode uniformly emits electrons. No electron emission is observed in the negatively biased region. Emission current is about 10−4 A/cm2 at a 20 V bias. It is further demonstrated that electrons are quasiballistically emitted from a PPS diode due to a significantly reduced electron scattering in the PPS layer. As a result, the diode can emit fluctuation-free stable electron emission. The simplified model of emission and energy distribution of electrons are proposed and it can explain the experimental results.
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