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III. Resistivity and Hall Measurements

Sample Geometry
Definitions for Resistivity Measurements
Resistivity Measurements
Resistivity Calculations
Definitions for Hall Measurements
Hall Measurements
Hall Calculations

The following procedures for carrying out Hall measurements provide a guideline for the beginning user who wants to learn operational procedures, as well as a reference for experienced operators who wish to invent and engineer improvements in the equipment and methodology.

Sample geometries for van der Pauw resistivity and Hall effect measurements. The cloverleaf design will have the lowest error due to its smaller effective contact size, but it is more difficult to fabricate than a square or rectangle.

Sample Geometry

It is preferable to fabricate samples from thin plates of the semiconductor material and to adopt a suitable geometry, as illustrated in Fig. 4. The average diameters (D) of the contacts, and sample thickness (d) must be much smaller than the distance between the contacts (L). Relative errors caused by non-zero values of D are of the order of D/L.

The following equipment is required:

Definitions for Resistivity Measurements

Four leads are connected to the four ohmic contacts on the sample. These are labeled 1, 2, 3, and 4 counterclockwise as shown in Fig. 4a. It is important to use the same batch of wire for all four leads in order to minimize thermoelectric effects. Similarly, all four ohmic contacts should consist of the same material.

We define the following parameters (see Fig. 2):

ρ = sample resistivity (inΩ·cm)

d = conducting layer thickness (in cm)

I12 = positive dc current I injected into contact 1 and taken out of contact 2. Likewise for I23, I34, I41, I21, I14, I43, I32 (in amperes, A)

V12 = dc voltage measured between contacts 1 and 2 (V1 - V2) without applied magnetic field (B = 0). Likewise for V23, V34, V41, V21, V14, V43, V32 (in volts, V)

Resistivity Measurements

The data must be checked for internal consistency, for ohmic contact quality, and for sample uniformity.

I < (200R)-0.5. (6)

Eight measurements of voltage yield the following eight values of resistance, all of which must be positive:

R21,34 = V34/I21R12,43 = V43/I12,
R32,41 = V41/I32R23,14 = V14/I23, (7)
R43,12 = V12/I43R34,21 = V21/I34,
R14,23 = V23/I14R41,32 = V32/I41.

Note that with this switching arrangement the voltmeter is reading only positive voltages, so the meter must be carefully zeroed.

Because the second half of this sequence of measurements is redundant, it permits important consistency checks on measurement repeatability, ohmic contact quality, and sample uniformity.

R21,34 = R12,43 R43,12 = R34,21
R32,41 = R23,14 R14,23 = R41,32 (8)

R21,34 + R12,43 = R43,12 + R34,21, and
R32,41 + R23,14 = R14,23 + R41,32. (9)

If any of the above fail to be true within 5 % (preferably 3 %), investigate the sources of error.

Resistivity Calculations

RA = (R21,34 + R12,43 + R43,12 + R34,21)/4 and
RB = (R32,41 + R23,14 + R14,23 + R41,32)/4 (10)

via the van der Pauw equation [Eq. (3)]. For numerical solution of Eq. (3), see the routine in Section IV. If the conducting layer thickness d is known, the bulk resistivity ρ = RS d can be calculated from RS.

Definitions for Hall Measurements

The Hall measurement, carried out in the presence of a magnetic field, yields the sheet carrier density ns and the bulk carrier density n or p (for n-type or p-type material) if the conducting layer thickness of the sample is known. The Hall voltage for thick, heavily doped samples can be quite small (of the order of microvolts).

The difficulty in obtaining accurate results is not merely the small magnitude of the Hall voltage since good quality digital voltmeters on the market today are quite adequate. The more severe problem comes from the large offset voltage caused by nonsymmetric contact placement, sample shape, and sometimes nonuniform temperature.

The most common way to control this problem is to acquire two sets of Hall measurements, one for positive and one for negative magnetic field direction. The relevant definitions are as follows (Fig. 3):

I13 = dc current injected into lead 1 and taken out of lead 3. Likewise for I31, I42, I24.

B = constant and uniform magnetic field intensity (to within 3 %) applied parallel to the z-axis within a few degrees (Fig .3). B is positive when pointing in the positive z direction, and negative when pointing in the negative z direction.

V24P = Hall voltage measured between leads 2 and 4 with magnetic field positive for I13. Likewise for V42P, V13P, and V31P.

Similar definitions for V24N, V42N, V13N, V31N apply when the magnetic field B is reversed.

Hall Measurements

The procedure for the Hall measurement is:

The above eight measurements of Hall voltages V24P, V42P, V13P, V31P, V24N, V42N, V13N, and V31N determine the sample type (n or p) and the sheet carrier density ns. The Hall mobility can be determined from the sheet density ns and the sheet resistance RS obtained in the resistivity measurement. See Eq. (2).

This sequence of measurements is redundant in that for a uniform sample the average Hall voltage from each of the two diagonal sets of contacts should be the same.

Hall Calculations

Steps for the calculation of carrier density and Hall mobility are:

VC = V24P - V24N, VD = V42P - V42N,
VE = V13P - V13N, and VF = V31P - V31N. (11)

ps = 8 x 10-8 IB/[q(VC + VD + VE + VF)]
if the voltage sum is positive, or
(12)
ns = |8 x 10-8 IB/[q(VC + VD + VE + VF)]|
if the voltage sum is negative,

where B is the magnetic field in gauss (G) and I is the dc current in amperes (A).

n = ns/d
p = ps/d (13)

The procedure for this sample is now complete. The final printout might contain (Sample Hall Worksheet):

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Date created: 6/30/2005
Last updated: 8/14/2007