Instead of boring you guys with my non-functional circuit problems I decided to post some macro shots I just took with my new macro lens + close up filter. First two is AAZ15 gold sealed Germanium diode then 4148 Silicon diode, LED, LDR, 6.2V Zener diode. I wanted to see a difference between Zener and Silicon diode but I can't, I guess it is in a microscopic level. Can someone explain the inner structure of these.
A zener in principle is a diode that has a deliberately low reverse breakdown voltage, plus being designed to try in minimise the internal resistance so the voltage does not change too much with changes in current.
Many P-N junctions show a similar effect, such as the base-emitter junction of normal transistors, if reverse biased.
I'd guess that even some rectifier diodes may behave rather like high voltage zeners, though the current would have to be extremely small to avoid them being damaged by overheating.
That makes sense, just as they teach in college. Is the shiny, mercury looking thing at the middle of the diode is the silicon. What is the orange/brown section that holds it.
If you had your camera on the CRT display of a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) then you might see the surface structure. Even LED's have an excellent Zener quality and a much lower series resistance. The 5mm epoxy types are about 10 Ohms for Red/Yellow at 2V 10 mA and 15 Ohms for White at 3V @ 10 mA with some tolerance depending on design/ process. They use transparent substrates so the reflector cup is the cathode and anode has the thin gold wire bond. So the -ve lead is the heat sink.
Average old school optical microscope can't make you see objects that won't let light pass through. Since these all have parts that are opeque I think it wouldn't fully work.