Semiconductor: Semiconductor Is A Material With Electrical Conductivity That Is
Semiconductor: Semiconductor Is A Material With Electrical Conductivity That Is
Semiconductor: Semiconductor Is A Material With Electrical Conductivity That Is
You can change the behavior of silicon and turn it into a conductor by
doping it. In doping, you mix a small amount of an impurity into the
silicon crystal.
blocks any current from leaving the battery if it is reversed -- this protects
the sensitive electronics in the device.
A semiconductor diode's behavior is not perfect, as shown in this graph:
apply a small current to the center layer of the sandwich, a much larger
current can flow through the sandwich as a whole. This gives a transistor
its switching behavior. A small current can turn a larger current on and
off.
A silicon chip is a piece of silicon that can hold thousands of transistors.
With transistors acting as switches, you can create Boolean gates, and
with Boolean gates you can create microprocessor chips.
The natural progression from silicon to doped silicon to transistors to
chips is what has made microprocessors and other electronic devices so
inexpensive and ubiquitous in today's society. The fundamental principles
are surprisingly simple. The miracle is the constant refinement of those
principles to the point where, today, tens of millions of transistors can be
inexpensively formed onto a single chip.
semiconductor behaves as an insulator at very low temperatures, but its
electrical conductivity increases with temperature. Even at room
temperature, a semiconductor's conductivity remains lower than that of a
conductor.
Semiconductors may be elemental materials, such as silicon, compound
semiconductors such as gallium arsenide, or alloys, such as silicon
germanium or aluminum gallium arsenide.
Semiconductors and insulators have an electronic band structure with a
band gap between the uppermost filled band (the valence band) and the
next available band, the conduction band. This means that most of the
valence electrons are not free to move through the material. This contrasts
with metals and other conductors, which have a partially filled band,
allowing the electrons to move freely through the material.
Band structure
the bands, and it is the size of this energy band gap that serves as an
arbitrary dividing line between semiconductors and insulators.
The electrons must move between states to conduct electric current, and
so due to the Pauli exclusion principle full bands do not contribute to the
electrical conductivity. However, as the temperature of a semiconductor
rises above absolute zero, the states of the electrons are increasingly
randomized, or smeared out, and some electrons are likely to be found in
states of the conduction band, which is the band immediately above the
valence band. The current-carrying electrons in the conduction band are
known as "free electrons", although they are often simply called
"electrons" if context allows this usage to be clear.
Electrons excited to the conduction band also leave behind electron holes,
or unoccupied states in the valence band. Both the conduction band
electrons and the valence band holes contribute to electrical conductivity.
The holes themselves don't actually move, but a neighboring electron can
move to fill the hole, leaving a hole at the place it has just come from, and
in this way the holes appear to move, and the holes behave as if they were
actual positively charged particles.
This behavior may also be viewed in relation to chemical bonding. The
electrons that have enough energy to be in the conduction band have
broken free of the covalent bonds between neighboring atoms in the solid,
and are free to move around, and hence conduct charge.
It is an important distinction between conductors and semiconductors
that, in semiconductors, movement of charge (current) is facilitated by
both electrons and holes. Contrast this to a conductor where the Fermi
level lies within the conduction band, such that the band is only half filled
with electrons. In this case, only a small amount of energy is needed for
the electrons to find other unoccupied states to move into, and hence for
current to flow.
-, of
Dopants
The materials chosen as suitable dopants depend on the atomic properties
of both the dopant and the material to be doped. In general, dopants that
produce the desired controlled changes are classified as either electron
acceptors or donors. A donor atom that activates (that is, becomes
incorporated into the crystal lattice) donates weakly-bound valence
electrons to the material, creating excess negative charge carriers. These
weakly-bound electrons can move about in the crystal lattice relatively
freely and can facilitate conduction in the presence of an electric field.
Conversely, an activated acceptor produces a hole. Semiconductors doped
with donor impurities are called n-type, while those doped with acceptor
impurities are known as p-type. The n and p type designations indicate
which charge carrier acts as the material's majority carrier. The opposite
carrier is called the minority carrier, which exists due to thermal
excitation at a much lower concentration compared to the majority
carrier.
For example, the pure semiconductor silicon has four valence electrons.
In silicon, the most common dopants are IUPAC group 13 (commonly
known as column III) and group 15 (commonly known as column IV)
elements. Group 13 elements all contain three valence electrons, causing
them to function as acceptors when used to dope silicon. Group 15
elements have five valence electrons, which allow them to act as a donor.
Therefore, a silicon crystal doped with boron creates a p-type
semiconductor whereas one doped with phosphorus results in an n-type
material.
Carrier concentration
would
indicate a very lightly doped p-type material. It is useful to note that even
degenerate levels of doping imply low concentrations of impurities with
respect to the base semiconductor. In crystalline intrinsic silicon, there is
approximately 51022 atoms/cm. Doping concentration for silicon
semiconductors may range anywhere from 1013 cm-3 to 1018 cm-3. Doping
concentration above about 1018 cm-3 is considered degenerate at room
temperature. Degenerately doped silicon contains a proportion of
impurity to silicon in the order of parts per thousand. This proportion may
vh p E
ve n E
Carrier Diffusion:
Due to thermally induced random motion, mobile particles tend to
move from a region of high concentration to a region of low
concentration.
Analogy: ink droplet in water
J p qD p
dp
dx
Velocity Saturation:
In reality, carrier velocities saturate at an upper limit, called
the saturation velocity (vsat).
0
1 bE
vsat 0
b
0
v
E
0 E
1
vsat
Diffusion Current:
methods
have
been
developed
to
produce
the
initial