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A diode functions as the electronic version of a one-way valve. By restricting the direction of movement of charge carriers, it allows an electric current to flow in one direction, but blocks it in the opposite direction.
ApplicationsRadio demodulationThe first use for the diode was the demodulation of amplitude modulated (AM) radio broadcasts. The history of this discovery is treated in depth in the radio article. In summary, an AM signal consists of alternating positive and negative peaks of current, whose amplitude or 'envelope' is proportional to the original audio signal, but whose average value is zero. The diode rectifies the AM signal (i.e. it eliminates the negative peaks), leaving a signal whose average amplitude is the desired audio signal. The average value is extracted using a simple filter and fed into a transducer (originally a crystal earpiece, now more likely to be a loudspeaker), which generates sound. Logic gatesDiodes can be used to construct logic gates: logical and and logical or. Power conversionA diode is called a half wave rectifier when it is used to convert alternating current electricity into direct current, by removing the negative portion of the current. A special arrangement of four diodes that will transform an alternating current into a direct current, using both positive and negative excursions of a single phase alternating current, is known as a diode bridge, single-phase bridge rectifier, or simply a full wave rectifier. With a split (center-tapped) alternating current supply it is possible to obtain full wave rectification with only two diodes. Often diodes come in pairs, as double diodes in the same housing. When it is desired to rectify three phase power, one could rectify each of the three phases with the arrangement of four diodes used in single phase, which would require a total of 12 diodes. However, due to redundancy, only six diodes are needed to make a three phase full wave rectifier. Most devices that generate alternating current (such devices are called alternators) generate three phase alternating current. For example, an automobile alternator has six diodes inside it to function as a full wave rectifier for battery charge applications. Many of the small wind turbines, such as the Lakota from True North Power (example installation (http://wearcam.org/urbine/)) use three double diodes bolted to the same heatsink. Over-Voltage ProtectionDiodes are frequently used to conduct dangerously high voltages away from sensitive devices, most commonly by being reverse-biased (non-conducting) under normal circumstances, and becoming forward-biased (conducting) when the voltage rises above its normal value. For example, diodes are used in stepper motor and relay circuits to de-energize coils rapidly without the damaging voltage spikes that would otherwise occur. Many integrated circuits also incorporate diodes on the connection pins to prevent external voltages from damaging their sensitive transistors. Specialized diodes are used to protect from over-voltages at higher power (see Types below). Diode technologyThe first diodes were vacuum tube devices (also known as thermionic valves), arrangements of electrodes surrounded by a vacuum within a glass envelope, similar in appearance to incandescent light bulbs. The arrangement of a filament and plate as a diode was invented in 1904 by John Ambrose Fleming, scientific adviser to the Marconi company, based on an observation by Thomas Edison. Like light bulbs, vacuum tube diodes have a filament through which current is passed, heating the filament. In its heated state it can now emit electrons into the vacuum. These electrons are electrostatically drawn to a positively charged outer metal plate called the anode, or just the "plate". Electrons do not flow from the plate back toward the filament, even if the charge on the plate is made negative, because the plate is not heated. Although vacuum tube diodes are still used for a few specialized applications, most modern diodes are based on semiconductor p-n junctions. In a p-n diode, conventional current can flow from the p-doped side (the anode) to the n-doped side (the cathode), but not in the opposite direction. When the diode is reverse-biased, the charge carriers are pulled away from the center of the device, creating a depletion region. AnalysisA diode's current-voltage, or I-V, characteristic curve is ascribed to the behavior of the so-called Depletion Layer or Depletion Zone which exists at the junction between the differing semiconductors. When a semiconducting junction is first created, electrons from the N-doped region diffuse across into the P-doped region where they "recombine," falling into holes. Recombined electrons and holes are immobile, and any region lacking mobile charge carriers behaves as an insulator. The Depletion width doesn't grow without limits. For each hole-electron pair which cancels out, a positively-charged dopant atom (ion) is left behind in the P-doped region, and a negative ion is left behind in the N-doped region. The entire carrier populations of the opposite-doped semiconductors do not recombine, since a significant e-field appears between the populations of opposite-charged ions which remain behind. This permanent e-field has a polarity which pushes the two kinds of charge carriers back into their respective doped regions. However, an externally applied voltage can defeat this e-field, shrinking the Depletion Layer until carriers are easily able to tunnel across the insulating gap, and so the diode "turns on." A diode's I-V, characteristic can be approximated by two regions of operation. Below a certain difference in potential between the two leads, the Depletion Layer has significant width, and the diode can be thought of as an open (non-conductive) circuit. As the potential difference is increased, at some stage the diode will become conductive and allow charges to flow, at which point it can be thought of as a connection with zero (or at least very low) resistance. More precisely, the transfer function is logarithmic, but so sharp that it looks like a corner (see also signal processing). The Shockley ideal diode equation (named after William Bradford Shockley) can be used to approximate the p-n diode's I-V characteristic. <math>I=I_S \left( {e^{qV_D \over nkT}-1} \right)\,<math>, where I is the diode current, IS is a scale factor called the saturation current, q is the charge on an electron (the elementary charge), k is Boltzmann's constant, T is the absolute temperature of the p-n junction and VD is the voltage across the diode. The term kT/q is the thermal voltage, sometimes written VT, and is approximately 26 mV at room temperature. n (sometimes omitted) is the emission coefficient, which varies from about 1 to 2 depending on the fabrication process. In a normal silicon diode, the drop in potential across a conducting diode is approximately 0.6 to 0.7 volts. The value is different for other diode types - Schottky diodes can be as low as 0.2V and light-emitting diodes (LEDs) can be 1.4V or more. The voltage drop across an ordinary silicon diode can be used as a simple voltage regulator: a load (such as an incandescent lamp or an electric motor) in series with one or more diodes absorbs the voltage in excess of the "diode drop," while a second, smaller load (usually a small incandescent lamp), in parallel with the diode(s), receives only the combined voltage drop of the diodes. This allows for a lamp to be illuminated at roughly constant brightness on the same power supply as (for example) a variable speed motor, and can also be used to protect small, delicate incandescent lamps placed in series strings from excess current or voltage. For a 1.5V lamp, two diodes in series provide adequate voltage; for AC or bidirectional DC, a second pair in reverse parallel is added. This technique is commonly used for lighting model railroad locomotive headlights (using the locomotive's motor as the "ballast" load), and passenger car lighting (using a concealed 16V lamp as the "ballast" load, as ordinary resistors do not work well for this purpose). Diode typesThere are several types of semiconductor junction diodes:
There are other types of diodes, which all share the basic function of allowing electrical current to flow in only one direction, but with different methods of construction.
Other uses for semiconductor diodes include sensing temperature, and computing analog logarithms. Related devices
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