The
Junction Field Effect Transistor (JFET)
is a type of field effect transistor whose basic structure consists of a
semiconductor bar with ohmic contacts at the end and heavily doped
regions on its opposite sides. If the semiconductor bar is made of
n-type material, then it is an n-channel JFET. The JFET is p-channel if
the bar is made of p-type material. The terminals at the ends of the
bar correspond to the source and drain of the JFET. The heavily doped
regions on the sides of the bar are connected to serve as the gate of
the JFET. Needless to say, the gate regions are doped to be of opposite
type with respect to the channel, so that a p-n junction is formed
between the channel and the gate regions.
By applying a
voltage across the source and the drain of a JFET, current consisting of
majority carriers (electrons for an n-channel and holes for a p-channel)
is caused to flow through the channel. The current flowing through the
channel is controlled by applying a gate voltage Vgs that
reverse biases the p-n junction formed by the gate with respect to the
source. The higher the Vgs is, the more the p-n junction is
reverse-biased, and the wider the depletion region across the channel
becomes. The wider depletion region results in a narrower channel,
consequently constricting the flow of current through the channel.
Varying Vgs therefore varies the current through the channel for any
given voltage across the source and the drain.
The JFET
structure described above is no longer practical to use because of the
difficulty with having to diffuse dopants from two opposite sides of a
bar. Most JFETs built onto IC's nowadays involve single-ended
geometries that require doping for the gate from only one side of the
channel, i.e., the surface of the wafer. This is achieved by building
the JFET on an epitaxially grown channel over a doped substrate that
acts as the second gate.
The current
through the channel of a MOSFET or JFET consists of only the majority
carriers, which is why FETs are referred to also as unipolar
transistors.
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Figure 1. Structure of a single-ended-geometry junction FET |
See Also:
p-n
Junction;
Diode;
Bipolar Transistor;
MOSFET;