Course Content
Physics Part 2

In this lecture, we study the PN Junction, understand how a diode works under forward and reverse biasing, and analyze the I–V characteristics of a PN junction diode.


🔷 What is a PN Junction (Diode)?

A PN junction is formed when a P-type semiconductor is joined with an N-type semiconductor.

When joined:

  • Electrons from N-region diffuse into P-region

  • Holes from P-region diffuse into N-region

  • This creates a depletion region

  • An internal electric field is formed

  • A potential barrier (junction potential) develops

This device is called a diode, which allows current to flow mainly in one direction.


⚡ Forward Biasing

In forward bias:

  • P-side is connected to positive terminal

  • N-side is connected to negative terminal

Effects:

  • Potential barrier decreases

  • Depletion region becomes thinner

  • Current flows easily

Once applied voltage exceeds threshold voltage (≈0.7V for silicon), current increases rapidly.


🔋 Reverse Biasing

In reverse bias:

  • P-side is connected to negative terminal

  • N-side is connected to positive terminal

Effects:

  • Potential barrier increases

  • Depletion region widens

  • Only a small leakage current flows

At very high reverse voltage, breakdown occurs (Zener or avalanche breakdown).


📊 I–V Characteristics of PN Junction

The I–V graph shows the relationship between current and voltage.

🔹 Forward Region:

  • Small current until threshold voltage

  • After threshold → Current increases exponentially

🔹 Reverse Region:

  • Very small constant current (reverse saturation current)

  • Sudden increase at breakdown voltage


📌 Important Points:

  • Diode is a unidirectional device

  • Conducts in forward bias

  • Blocks current in reverse bias

  • Used in rectifiers, power supplies, signal processing


🎯 By the End of This Lecture

You will:

  • Define PN junction and diode

  • Explain depletion region and potential barrier

  • Differentiate forward and reverse biasing

  • Interpret I–V characteristics of diode

This lecture builds the foundation for studying rectifiers and transistor applications in the next lessons.