Bulletin of the American Physical Society
77th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Monday–Friday, September 30–October 4 2024; San Diego, California
Session FF2: Sheaths and Plasma Materials Interactions
10:00 AM–11:30 AM,
Friday, October 4, 2024
Room: Great Room 1-4
Chair: Lucas Beving, Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract: FF2.00005 : Electron Field Emission from Semiconductors and Metals: Emission and Transport Time View of the Problem
11:15 AM–11:30 AM
Presenter:
Sergey V Baryshev
(Michigan State University)
Author:
Sergey V Baryshev
(Michigan State University)
It has been found (as early as in the 1960’s and documented to this day) that unlike in metals, where field emission obeys the Fowler-Nordheim (FN) law in a very large dynamic range, semiconductors (III-V and II-VI, diamond, carbon nanotubes) do not follow this law demonstrating unusual current-electric field relationships. At the same time, application of FN law remains a common tool in literature to describe emission from any kind of materials (be it metal or semiconductor).
This talk reviews some basic reasons why FN law should not be naturally expected to rule field emission from semiconductors. The problem is approached through analytically calculating time scales associated with quantum tunneling (emission barrier effect), two-dimensional space charge (vacuum effect) and charge transport (emitter material effect). Examples will be given of combinations of parameters (work function, field enhancement factor, tip geometry and doping) where semiconductor emission may appear as if it follows the FN law. Opposite examples will be given where the FN emission is vanished and taken over by the interplay between the space charge and material charge resupply effects. Comparisons between experimental results and the presented time-based analytical approach will be given.
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