Ronald Troutman
Synthetic Metals
The maximum operating temperature of conventional silicon sensors is limited to about 200 °C, due to excessive thermal generation of carriers at higher temperatures. The minority-carrier exclusion effect can be exploited to reduce the number of thermally generated carriers, ultimately maintaining extrinsic carrier concentrations at intrinsic temperatures. Based on this effect, a silicon magnetic-field sensor with a maximum operating temperature of about 400 °C is presented. The sensitivity has been improved by about 500% with respect to a previously reported version, and now measures about 60 V (A T)-1 at room temperature. Additionally, the theoretical support of the exclusion effect has been improved with a more accurate analytical model.
Ronald Troutman
Synthetic Metals
T. Schneider, E. Stoll
Physical Review B
A.B. McLean, R.H. Williams
Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics
Zelek S. Herman, Robert F. Kirchner, et al.
Inorganic Chemistry