Characterization of high-temperature PbTe p-n junctions prepared by thermal diffusion and by ion-implantation
A. V. Butenko, R. Kahatabi, E. Mogilko, R. Strul, V. Sandomirsky, Y., Schlesinger, Z. Dashevsky, V. Kasiyan, S. Genikhov

TL;DR
This study characterizes high-quality PbTe p-n junctions created by thermal diffusion and ion implantation, demonstrating their rectifying properties up to 180 K and analyzing their electrical and physical parameters.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of PbTe p-n junctions made by thermal diffusion and ion implantation, highlighting their high-temperature operation and detailed electrical characteristics.
Findings
Maximum operating temperature of 180 K with rectifying behavior.
Saturation current density J0 reaches ~1 A/cm2 at 180 K.
Zero-bias resistance product R0Ae decreases significantly at higher temperatures.
Abstract
We describe here the characteristics of two types of high-quality PbTe p-n-junctions, prepared in this work: (1) by thermal diffusion of In4Te3 gas (TDJ), and (2) by ion implantation (implanted junction, IJ) of In (In-IJ) and Zn (Zn-IJ). The results, as presented here, demonstrate the high quality of these PbTe diodes. Capacitance-voltage and current-voltage characteristics have been measured. The measurements were carried out over a temperature range from ~ 10 K to ~ 180 K. The latter was the highest temperature, where the diode still demonstrated rectifying properties. This maximum operating temperature is higher than any of the earlier reported results. The saturation current density, J0, in both diode types, was ~ 10^-5 A/cm2 at 80 K, while at 180 K J0 ~ 10^-1 A/cm2 in TDJ and ~ 1 A/cm2 in both ion-implanted junctions. At 80 K the reverse current started to increase markedly at a…
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