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At zero K very high field strengths are required to move an electron from the top of the
valence band to the bottom of the conduction band
Thermal excitation is an easier route
P(E) →
Law of mass action: n x p = ni2
E →
at a given temperature.
0 0 .5 1
Electron-hole formation in Si due to absorption of light
Conductivity in a semiconductor depends on two factors
1. Concentration of electrons and holes. Denoted as n and p and is temperature
dependent.
2. Ability of the electron and holes to travel in the lattice without scattering.
In typical semiconductors, concentration of electrons and holes are small, compared to the atomic con-
centration, so that electron-electron scattering can be ignored. But there is still the interaction between the
electron and lattice. This is defined by a quantity called mobility, denoted by the symbol .
Velocity =
From the thermal velocity and the scattering time it is possible to find the distance traveled between 2
scattering events. This distance is approximately 23 nm. In terms of number of unit cells this works out to
be 43 unit cells (Si lattice constant is 0.53 nm).
Carrier concentration in semiconductors
Doping of Si
V column element (P, As, Sb) → the extra unbonded electron is
practically free
Energy level near the conduction band
n- type semiconductor
III column element (B, Al, Ga, In) → the extra electron for bonding
supplied by a neighboring Si atom → leaves a hole in Si.
Energy level near the valence band
p- type semiconductor
Summary of Charge Carriers
Deep
Shallow
Intel Ireland
Ionization energy for extra electron from phosphorous
• P+ ion with extra electron treated as H atom with one electron
np ni
2
n ND p NA
ND >>>> ni 2 2 NA >>>> ni
ni ni
p n
ND NA
Band diagram, density of states, Fermi-Dirac distribution,
and the carrier concentrations at thermal equilibrium
Intrinsic
semiconductor
n-type
Nd semiconductor
NA p-type
semiconductor
N-type P-type
Intel Ireland
Fermi Level in extrinsic semiconductor
Liquid, gas, solid
Doping process
Compensation doping
nd
charge
neutrality
ni
Ionization
nd
pa
ni
ND = 1016
NA = 1015
ND – NA >>>> ni
Find ???
NA – ND >>>> ni
Degenerate semiconductors E g ’ < Eg
Temperature dependence of Intrinsic carrier concentration
ln (ni) 1/T
Slope = Eg/2KB
200 K
500 K 300 K
Temperature dependence of carrier concentration
Extrinsic semiconductor
Intrinsic semiconductor
ST
Extrinsic semiconductor
High
Low
Intrinsic semiconductor
1/2
The 1/2 enters in above equation because the donor levels are localized and can
accommodate only one electron instead of two like a regular energy state.
Slope = Ed/2K
Ts
1. Above the saturation temperature the donor levels are completely ionized
so that n = Nd.
2. As temperature keeps increasing there comes a temperature when the electrons from
the valence band (intrinsic carriers) becomes comparable in concentration to Nd. This
temperature is called the intrinsic temperature, Ti.
3. Above this temperature the semiconductor behaves as intrinsic. Ti is defined as the
temperature when n = 1.1 Nd.
90% to 110% Nd,
Doping
1. It increases the conductivity by preferentially increasing either
electron or hole concentration.