All Questions
Tagged with electricity semiconductor-physics
61
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649
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Why is generation rate equal to recombination rate in extrinsic semicondcutor?
The mass action law states, that the product of electron concentration and hole concentration is equal to the square of the intrinsic carrier density. That applies to both intrinsic and extrinsic ...
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1
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284
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Is there a potential difference across the bulb after current passed through a diode?
I understand that voltage can exist without current so what I want to ask is will there be a potential difference across the bulb(situated after the diode) when a batteries supplied energy through a ...
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Electric fields and electric potentials in semiconductors
The zener diode is heavilier doped than a normal diode , that is why its depletion region is smaller than the delpetion region of a normal diode and that is why the electric field is very strong.Zener ...
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Can a DC voltage excite a pure semiconductor (or insulator) from the valence band to the conduction band?
I have a question I am sticking around and can't find a satisfying answer. Say I have an intrinsic semidonductor at zero Kelvin (no electrons in conduction band). I apply a DC voltage across it. Can ...
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496
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Quasi-fermi levels in a solar cell?
I was wondering, if my fermi levels splits up due to n and p type doping into two fermi levels, one for the p type one for the n type, and now due to light radiation my fermi levels split up into 2 ...
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3
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987
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When an electron moves in the valence band, does it need energy?
I am wondering what actually happens when an electron moves in the valence band. As I understand an electron needs energy to free itself from an atom. Is it so that the electron gets energy to free ...
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Isn't heating insulator enough for sufficient electrons to escape valence band and conduct electricity?
Diamond has about 5.5eV of energy gap, So If I heat diamond it will get atleast 1J energy which is enough to excite about 10^18 electrons, But Diamond still not conduct electricity, Why?
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Current Amplification in Common Base Transistor
How does a common base transistor amplify current if a small part of its emitter current gets divided into base current and the rest goes to collector current? If the input signal is applied to the ...
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How does current flow from the emitter, through the base and to the collector in a NPN transistor?
So, I understand that for a NPN transistor to work the emitter-base junction needs to be forward biased and the collector-base junction needs to be reverse biased. I understand how current flows from ...
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1
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How can NO charge carriers exist in the depletion region?
I learned that no charge carriers exist in the depletion region of a PN junction due to the balance between the diffusion current and the drift current due to the electric field created by charged ...
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How do I calculate the standard uncertainty? Task on determination of energy gap width of semiconductors
I am creating a report for my physics class and all I have left to do is calculate the standard uncertainty for this formula.
$$ \ln \left( \frac{R_{T}}{R_{\infty}} \right) = \ln \left( R_{T} \right) -...
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Confusion regarding Hall effect in semiconductors
In many places, it's mentioned that in hall effect, the holes move under the influence of magnetic field in the direction as shown in the figure. In this figure itself, the bound electrons move in the ...
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Why do diodes block current in a single direction?
It seems like all the explanations for diode mechanics simply state that if N-type semiconductor is connected to V+ of the battery, the depletion region grows so current cannot pass.
It seems, ...
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Where does the drift current in a pn juntion come from?
I know I know. There are around 4 similar questions on here, but they do not properly answer my question.
I'd like to know where the drift current in a pn juntion (no bias) comes from. From what ...
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Why in a conductor increase in temperature makes the atoms vibrate but in a semiconductor the kinetic energy of the free electrons is increased?
When temperature is increased in case of a semiconductor the free electron gets more energy to cross the energy gap to the conduction band from the valence band.so now more electrons can go easily to ...