Claims
- 1. A high-voltage diode, comprising:
an anodal p-conducting zone being doped with a dose of 1.3-3×1012 dopant atoms cm−2; a cathodal n−-conducting drift zone forming a pn junction with said anodal p-conducting zone; a p+-conducting anode emitter disposed in said anodal p-conducting zone, said anodal p-conducting zone being lighter doped than said p+-conducting anode emitter, said p+-conducting anode emitter having a relatively high surface concentration doping with only a small penetration depth, said p+-conducting anode emitter having a dopant dose lying between 5×1012 dopant atoms cm−2 and 2×1013 dopant atoms cm−2; an anode metallization layer adjoining said p+-conducting anode emitter; a cathode metallization layer; an n+-conducting cathode emitter adjoining said cathode metallization layer; and an n-conducting zone disposed between said cathodal n−-conducting drift zone and said n+-conducting cathode emitter.
- 2. The high-voltage diode according to claim 1, wherein said n+-conducting cathode emitter having surface and a doping concentration above 1019 dopant atoms cm−3 at said surface.
- 3. The high-voltage diode according to claim 1, wherein said anodal p-conducting zone has implanted dopant atoms that diffused out with a diffusion width of about 2 μm.
- 4. The high-voltage diode according to claim 1, wherein said p+-conducting anode emitter is implanted with a dose of at most 2×1013 dopant atoms cm−2.
- 5. The high-voltage diode according to claim 1, wherein at least one of said n+-conducting cathode emitter and said p-conducting anode emitter has a surface with crystal damage near said surface for reducing emitter efficiency.
- 6. The high-voltage diode according to claim 5, wherein said crystal damage is produced by one of irradiation and ion implantation.
- 7. The high-voltage diode according to claim 6, wherein argon or krypton is used for the irradiation or the ion implantation.
- 8. A method for producing a high-voltage diode having an anodal p-conducting zone, a cathodal n−-conducting drift zone forming a pn junction with the anodal p-conducting zone, a p+-conducting anode emitter disposed in the anodal p-conducting zone, an anode metallization layer adjoining said p+-conducting anode emitter, an n+-conducting cathode emitter, a cathode metallization layer adjoining the n+-conducting cathode emitter, and an n-conducting zone disposed between the cathodal n−-conducting drift zone and the n+-conducting cathode emitter, the method which comprises the steps of:
implanting the anodal p-conducting zone adjoining the pn junction with a dose of 1.3-3×1012 dopant atoms cm−2 and implanted dopant atoms of the anodal p-conducting zone being diffused out with a diffusion width of about 2 μm; implanting the p+-conducting anode emitter with a dose of between 5×1012 dopant atoms cm−2 and 2×1013 dopant atoms cm−2, so that the anodal p-conducting zone being lighter doped than the p+-conducting anode emitter, the p+-conducting anode emitter having a relatively high surface concentration doping with a shallow penetration depth; and implanting the n+-conducting cathode emitter with dopant atoms having a dose such that a doping concentration of the n+-conducting cathode emitter is above 1019 dopant atoms cm−3 at a surface.
- 9. The method according to claim 8, which comprises implanting the p+-conducting anode emitter with a dose of at most 2×1013 dopant atoms cm−2.
- 10. The method according to claim 8, which comprises producing crystal damage near a surface in at least one of the n+-conducting cathode emitter and the p+-conducting anode emitter by one of irradiation and ion implantation for reducing emitter efficiency.
- 11. The method according to claim 10, which comprises using one of argon and krypton for the irradiation or the ion implantation.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
100 31 461.9 |
Jun 2000 |
DE |
|
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application is a continuation of copending International Application No. PCT/DE01/02366, filed Jun. 27, 2001, which designated the United States and was not published in English.
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
PCT/DE01/02366 |
Jun 2001 |
US |
Child |
10331928 |
Dec 2002 |
US |