Semiconductor Electronics-Materials, Devices And Simple Circuits MCQs With Answers – Part 3 (Class 12 Physics)
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Semiconductor Electronics-Materials, Devices and Simple Circuits MCQs with Answers – Part 3 (Class 12 Physics)

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211. A silicon diode is reverse biased by \(5\,V\), and its reverse saturation current is \(2\,\mu A\). If the reverse voltage is changed to \(8\,V\) while staying far from breakdown, the current is most likely closest to:
ⓐ. \(0\,\mu A\)
ⓑ. \(2\,\mu A\)
ⓒ. \(5\,\mu A\)
ⓓ. \(8\,\mu A\)
212. A graph is described for a reverse-biased diode.
The horizontal axis is reverse voltage magnitude, and the vertical axis is reverse current magnitude. The curve remains almost flat at a small current for some range, then rises sharply at a much larger reverse voltage.
The nearly flat part of the graph represents:
ⓐ. forward current due to majority carriers
ⓑ. minority-carrier reverse saturation current
ⓒ. ohmic conduction through a metal wire
ⓓ. complete absence of thermally generated carriers
213. A diode under reverse bias suddenly carries a very large current when the reverse voltage is made high enough. The most suitable description is:
ⓐ. ordinary forward conduction has occurred
ⓑ. the diode has become unbiased
ⓒ. breakdown has occurred
ⓓ. fixed ions have become the only mobile carriers
214. Assertion: A reverse-biased diode has only a small current before breakdown. Reason: Reverse bias widens the depletion region and blocks majority carriers, while the remaining current is mainly due to minority carriers.
ⓐ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, but Reason does not explain Assertion
ⓑ. Assertion is true, but Reason is false
ⓒ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason explains Assertion
ⓓ. Assertion is false, but Reason is true
215. A claim says: “Reverse bias blocks a diode because no carriers of any kind exist in the semiconductor.” The best evaluation is:
ⓐ. The claim is suitable because reverse bias destroys all electron-hole pairs permanently
ⓑ. The claim is suitable only for germanium and never for silicon
ⓒ. The claim is unsuitable because reverse bias always gives large majority-carrier current
ⓓ. The claim is unsuitable; minority carriers cause a small reverse current.
216. Study the reverse-bias observations.
RowObservationInterpretation
P\(p\)-side connected to negative terminalReverse bias
QDepletion region becomes widerMajority carriers are pulled away from junction
RSmall current before breakdownMinority-carrier current
SSmall current before breakdownLarge majority-carrier injection
The row that is not suitable is:
ⓐ. Row P
ⓑ. Row S
ⓒ. Row Q
ⓓ. Row R
217. A diode symbol is used in a circuit diagram. The terminal connected to the \(p\)-type side is called the:
ⓐ. anode
ⓑ. cathode
ⓒ. collector
ⓓ. base
218. In a \(p\)-\(n\) junction diode, the cathode is connected to:
ⓐ. the \(p\)-type side
ⓑ. the \(n\)-type side
ⓒ. the base region
ⓓ. the collector region
219. A circuit has the anode of a diode connected to \(+3\,V\) and the cathode connected to \(0\,V\). The diode is:
ⓐ. reverse biased
ⓑ. forward biased
ⓒ. unbiased
ⓓ. in reverse breakdown necessarily
220. A diode has its cathode at \(+10\,V\) and its anode at \(+2\,V\). The bias condition is:
ⓐ. forward bias
ⓑ. zero bias
ⓒ. impossible to decide because both voltages are positive
ⓓ. reverse bias
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