» 

definitions

semiconductor (n.)

1.a substance as germanium or silicon whose electrical conductivity is intermediate between that of a metal and an insulator; its conductivity increases with temperature and in the presence of impurities

2.(physics)a conductor made with semiconducting material

synonyms

semiconductor (n.)

semiconducting material

semiconductor (n.) (physics)

semiconductor device, semiconductor unit

phrases

-AMI Semiconductor • Actions Semiconductor • Advanced Semiconductor Engineering • All American Semiconductor • Alliance Semiconductor • Aureal Semiconductor • Bow and warp of semiconductor wafers and substrates • Britney Spears' Guide to Semiconductor Physics • Cambridge Semiconductor Limited • Charge carrier (semiconductor) • Chartered Semiconductor • Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing • Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor • Compound semiconductor • Cypress Semiconductor • Dallas Semiconductor • Degenerate semiconductor • Doping (semiconductor) • Dynex Semiconductor • Electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor sensor • Elmos Semiconductor • Extrinsic semiconductor • Fabless semiconductor companies • Fabless semiconductor company • Fabrication (semiconductor) • Fairchild Semiconductor • Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation • Freescale Semiconductor • Freescale Semiconductor Inc. • GSTI Semiconductor Index • Global Semiconductor Alliance • Health hazards in semiconductor manufacturing occupations • Hindustan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company • IEEE Transactions on Semiconductor Manufacturing • Ingenic Semiconductor • Intrinsic semiconductor • Jazz Semiconductor • Largest semiconductor makers • Lattice Semiconductor • List of largest semiconductor makers • List of semiconductor IP core vendors • List of semiconductor materials • MStar Semiconductor • Magnetic semiconductor • Magnum Semiconductor • Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor • Metal-semiconductor junction • Metal–oxide–semiconductor structure • N-type (semiconductor) • N-type Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor • N-type semiconductor • Narrow gap semiconductor • National Semiconductor • National Semiconductor PACE • National Semiconductor SC/MP • Nordic Semiconductor • ON Semiconductor • Optical modulators using semiconductor nano-structures • Orbit Semiconductor • Organic semiconductor • P-type (semiconductor) • P-type semiconductor • PHLX Semiconductor Sector • Parsé Semiconductor Co. • Power semiconductor device • Powerchip Semiconductor • Rabbit Semiconductor • Reliability (semiconductor) • Samsung Semiconductor • Sanyo Semiconductor • Seagull Semiconductor • Semiconductor (artists) • Semiconductor Chip Protection Act of 1984 • Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International • Semiconductor Industry Association • Semiconductor International • Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation • Semiconductor Research Corporation • Semiconductor Science and Technology • Semiconductor Test Consortium • Semiconductor characterization techniques • Semiconductor curve tracer • Semiconductor detector • Semiconductor device • Semiconductor device fabrication • Semiconductor device modeling • Semiconductor equipment sales leaders by year • Semiconductor fabrication plant • Semiconductor fault diagnostics • Semiconductor fuse • Semiconductor industry • Semiconductor intellectual property core • Semiconductor manufacturing • Semiconductor manufacturing equipment • Semiconductor memory • Semiconductor on insulator • Semiconductor package • Semiconductor packaging • Semiconductor process simulation • Semiconductor ring laser • Semiconductor sales leaders by year • Seoul Semiconductor • Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory • Sierra Semiconductor • Teridian Semiconductor • TriQuint Semiconductor • Tundra Semiconductor • Undoped semiconductor • Varian Semiconductor • Volterra Semiconductor • Wafer (semiconductor) • Zarlink Semiconductor

analogical dictionary

Wikipedia

Semiconductor

                   

A semiconductor has electrical conductivity intermediate in magnitude between that of a conductor and an insulator. This means a conductivity roughly in the range of 10-2 to 104 siemens per centimeter (S⋅cm-1). Semiconductors are the foundation of modern electronics, including radio, computers, and telephones. Semiconductor-based electronic components include transistors, solar cells, many kinds of diodes including the light-emitting diode (LED), the silicon controlled rectifier, photo-diodes, and digital and analog integrated circuits. Semiconductor solar photovoltaic panels directly convert light energy into electricity. In a metallic conductor, current is carried by the flow of electrons.

Common semiconducting materials are crystalline solids—chips, but amorphous and liquid semiconductors are also known. These include hydrogenated amorphous silicon and mixtures of arsenic, selenium and tellurium in a variety of proportions. Such compounds share with better known semiconductors intermediate conductivity and a rapid variation of conductivity with temperature, as well as occasional negative resistance. Such disordered materials lack the rigid crystalline structure of conventional semiconductors such as silicon and are generally used in thin film structures, which do not require material of higher electronic quality, being relatively insensitive to impurities and radiation damage. Organic semiconductors, that is, organic materials with properties resembling conventional semiconductors, are also known.

Silicon is used to create most semiconductors commercially. Dozens of other materials are used, including germanium, gallium arsenide, and silicon carbide. A pure semiconductor is often called an “intrinsic” semiconductor. The electronic properties and the conductivity of a semiconductor can be changed in a controlled manner by adding very small quantities of other elements, called “dopants”, to the intrinsic material. In crystalline silicon typically this is achieved by adding impurities of boron or phosphorus to the melt and then allowing it to solidify into the crystal. This process is called "doping" and the semiconductor is "extrinsic".[1]

Contents

  Explaining semiconductor energy bands

There are three popular ways to classify the electronic structure of a crystal.

  • Band structure

  Energy bands and electrical conduction

In the classic crystalline semiconductors, electrons can have energies only within certain bands (i.e. ranges of levels of energy). Energetically, these bands are located between the energy of the ground state, the state in which electrons are tightly bound to the atomic nuclei of the material, and the free electron energy, the latter describing the energy required for an electron to escape entirely from the material. The energy bands each correspond to a large number of discrete quantum states of the electrons, and most of the states with low energy (closer to the nucleus) are occupied, up to a particular band called the valence band. Semiconductors and insulators are distinguished from metals because the valence band in any given metal is nearly filled with electrons under usual operating conditions, while very few (semiconductor) or virtually none (insulator) of them are available in the conduction band, the band immediately above the valence band.

The ease with which electrons in the semiconductor can be excited from the valence band to the conduction band depends on the band gap between the bands. The size of this energy bandgap serves as an arbitrary dividing line (roughly 4 eV) between semiconductors and insulators.

With covalent bonds, an electron moves by hopping to a neighboring bond. The Pauli exclusion principle requires the electron to be lifted into the higher anti-bonding state of that bond. For delocalized states, for example in one dimension – that is in a nanowire, for every energy there is a state with electrons flowing in one direction and another state with the electrons flowing in the other. For a net current to flow, more states for one direction than for the other direction must be occupied. For this to occur, energy is required, as in the semiconductor the next higher states lie above the band gap. Often this is stated as: full bands do not contribute to the electrical conductivity. However, as the temperature of a semiconductor rises above absolute zero, there is more energy in the semiconductor to spend on lattice vibration and on exciting electrons into the conduction 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, i.e. 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 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.

One covalent bond between neighboring atoms in the solid is ten times stronger than the binding of the single electron to the atom, so freeing the electron does not imply destruction of the crystal structure.

  Holes: electron absence as a charge carrier

The concept of holes can also be applied to metals, where the Fermi level lies within the conduction band. With most metals the Hall effect indicates electrons are the charge carriers. However, some metals have a mostly filled conduction band. In these, the Hall effect reveals positive charge carriers, which are not the ion-cores, but holes. In the case of a metal, 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. Sometimes even in this case it may be said that a hole was left behind, to explain why the electron does not fall back to lower energies: It cannot find a hole. In the end in both materials electron-phonon scattering and defects are the dominant causes for resistance.

  Fermi-Dirac distribution. States with energy ε below the Fermi energy, here µ, have higher probability n to be occupied, and those above are less likely to be occupied. Smearing of the distribution increases with temperature.

The energy distribution of the electrons determines which of the states are filled and which are empty. This distribution is described by Fermi-Dirac statistics. The distribution is characterized by the temperature of the electrons, and the Fermi energy or Fermi level. Under absolute zero conditions the Fermi energy can be thought of as the energy up to which available electron states are occupied. At higher temperatures, the Fermi energy is the energy at which the probability of a state being occupied has fallen to 0.5.

The dependence of the electron energy distribution on temperature also explains why the conductivity of a semiconductor has a strong temperature dependency, as a semiconductor operating at lower temperatures will have fewer available free electrons and holes able to do the work.

  Energy–momentum dispersion

In the preceding description an important fact is ignored for the sake of simplicity: the dispersion of the energy. The reason that the energies of the states are broadened into a band is that the energy depends on the value of the wave vector, or k-vector, of the electron. The k-vector, in quantum mechanics, is the representation of the momentum of a particle.

The dispersion relationship determines the effective mass, m*, of electrons or holes in the semiconductor, according to the formula:

 m^{*} = \hbar^2 \cdot \left[ {{d^2 E(k)} \over {d k^2}} \right]^{-1}.

The effective mass is important as it affects many of the electrical properties of the semiconductor, such as the electron or hole mobility, which in turn influences the diffusivity of the charge carriers and the electrical conductivity of the semiconductor.

Typically the effective mass of electrons and holes are different. This affects the relative performance of p-channel and n-channel IGFETs.[2]

The top of the valence band and the bottom of the conduction band might not occur at that same value of k. Materials with this situation, such as silicon and germanium, are known as indirect bandgap materials. Materials in which the band extrema are aligned in k, for example gallium arsenide, are called direct bandgap semiconductors. Direct gap semiconductors are particularly important in optoelectronics because they are much more efficient as light emitters than indirect gap materials

  Carrier generation and recombination

When ionizing radiation strikes a semiconductor, it may excite an electron out of its energy level and consequently leave a hole. This process is known as electron–hole pair generation. Electron-hole pairs are constantly generated from thermal energy as well, in the absence of any external energy source.

Electron-hole pairs are also apt to recombine. Conservation of energy demands that these recombination events, in which an electron loses an amount of energy larger than the band gap, be accompanied by the emission of thermal energy (in the form of phonons) or radiation (in the form of photons).

In some states, the generation and recombination of electron–hole pairs are in equipoise. The number of electron-hole pairs in the steady state at a given temperature is determined by quantum statistical mechanics. The precise quantum mechanical mechanisms of generation and recombination are governed by conservation of energy and conservation of momentum.

As the probability that electrons and holes meet together is proportional to the product of their amounts, the product is in steady state nearly constant at a given temperature, providing that there is no significant electric field (which might "flush" carriers of both types, or move them from neighbour regions containing more of them to meet together) or externally driven pair generation. The product is a function of the temperature, as the probability of getting enough thermal energy to produce a pair increases with temperature, being approximately exp(−EG/kT), where k is Boltzmann's constant, T is absolute temperature and EG is band gap.

The probability of meeting is increased by carrier traps—impurities or dislocations which can trap an electron or hole and hold it until a pair is completed. Such carrier traps are sometimes purposely added to reduce the time needed to reach the steady state.

  Semi-insulators

Some materials are classified as semi-insulators. These have electrical conductivity nearer to that of electrical insulators. Semi-insulators find niche applications in micro-electronics, such as substrates for HEMT. An example of a common semi-insulator is gallium arsenide.[3]

  Doping

The property of semiconductors that makes them most useful for constructing electronic devices is that their conductivity may easily be modified by introducing impurities into their crystal lattice. The process of adding controlled impurities to a semiconductor is known as doping. The amount of impurity, or dopant, added to an intrinsic (pure) semiconductor varies its level of conductivity. Doped semiconductors are often referred to as extrinsic. By adding impurity to pure semiconductors, the electrical conductivity may be varied not only by the number of impurity atoms but also, by the type of impurity atom and the changes may be thousand folds and million folds. For example, a 1 cm3 specimen of a metal or semiconductor has of the order of 1022 atoms. In a metal every atom donates at least one free electron for conduction, thus 1 cm3 of metal contains on the order of 1022 free electrons. Whereas a 1 cm3 of sample pure germanium at 20 °C, contains about 4.2×1022 atoms and 2.5×1013 free electrons and 2.5×1013 holes (empty spaces in crystal lattice having positive charge). The addition of 0.001% of arsenic (an impurity) donates an extra 1017 free electrons in the same volume and the electrical conductivity is increased by a factor of 10,000.

  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. (The donor atoms introduce some states under, but very close to the conduction band edge. Electrons at these states can be easily excited to the conduction band, becoming free electrons, at room temperature.) 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 group III) and group 15 (commonly known as group V) 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 allows 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

The concentration of dopant introduced to an intrinsic semiconductor determines its concentration and indirectly affects many of its electrical properties. The most important factor that doping directly affects is the material's carrier concentration. In an intrinsic semiconductor under thermal equilibrium, the concentration of electrons and holes is equivalent. That is,

n = p = n_i.\

If we have a non-intrinsic semiconductor in thermal equilibrium the relation becomes:

n_0 \cdot p_0 = n_i^2\

where n0 is the concentration of conducting electrons, p0 is the electron hole concentration, and ni is the material's intrinsic carrier concentration. Intrinsic carrier concentration varies between materials and is dependent on temperature. Silicon's ni, for example, is roughly 1.08×1010 cm−3 at 300 kelvins (room temperature).[4]

In general, an increase in doping concentration affords an increase in conductivity due to the higher concentration of carriers available for conduction. Degenerately (very highly) doped semiconductors have conductivity levels comparable to metals and are often used in modern integrated circuits as a replacement for metal. Often superscript plus and minus symbols are used to denote relative doping concentration in semiconductors. For example, n+ denotes an n-type semiconductor with a high, often degenerate, doping concentration. Similarly, p- 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 are approximately 5×1022 atoms/cm³. 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 on the order of parts per thousand. This proportion may be reduced to parts per billion in very lightly doped silicon. Typical concentration values fall somewhere in this range and are tailored to produce the desired properties in the device that the semiconductor is intended for.

  Effect on band structure

  Band diagram of PN junction operation in forward bias mode showing reducing depletion width. Both p and n junctions are doped at a 1×1015/cm3 doping level, leading to built-in potential of ~0.59 V. Reducing depletion width can be inferred from the shrinking charge profile, as fewer dopants are exposed with increasing forward bias [1].

Doping a semiconductor crystal introduces allowed energy states within the band gap but very close to the energy band that corresponds to the dopant type. In other words, donor impurities create states near the conduction band while acceptors create states near the valence band. The gap between these energy states and the nearest energy band is usually referred to as dopant-site bonding energy or EB and is relatively small. For example, the EB for boron in silicon bulk is 0.045 eV, compared with silicon's band gap of about 1.12 eV. Because EB is so small, it takes little energy to ionize the dopant atoms and create free carriers in the conduction or valence bands. Usually the thermal energy available at room temperature is sufficient to ionize most of the dopant.

Dopants also have the important effect of shifting the material's Fermi level towards the energy band that corresponds with the dopant with the greatest concentration. Since the Fermi level must remain constant in a system in thermodynamic equilibrium, stacking layers of materials with different properties leads to many useful electrical properties. For example, the p-n junction's properties are due to the energy band bending that happens as a result of lining up the Fermi levels in contacting regions of p-type and n-type material.

This effect is shown in a band diagram. The band diagram typically indicates the variation in the valence band and conduction band edges versus some spatial dimension, often denoted x. The Fermi energy is also usually indicated in the diagram. Sometimes the intrinsic Fermi energy, Ei, which is the Fermi level in the absence of doping, is shown. These diagrams are useful in explaining the operation of many kinds of semiconductor devices.

  Preparation of semiconductor materials

Semiconductors with predictable, reliable electronic properties are necessary for mass production. The level of chemical purity needed is extremely high because the presence of impurities even in very small proportions can have large effects on the properties of the material. A high degree of crystalline perfection is also required, since faults in crystal structure (such as dislocations, twins, and stacking faults) interfere with the semiconducting properties of the material. Crystalline faults are a major cause of defective semiconductor devices. The larger the crystal, the more difficult it is to achieve the necessary perfection. Current mass production processes use crystal ingots between 100 mm and 300 mm (4–12 inches) in diameter which are grown as cylinders and sliced into wafers.

Because of the required level of chemical purity and the perfection of the crystal structure which are needed to make semiconductor devices, special methods have been developed to produce the initial semiconductor material. A technique for achieving high purity includes growing the crystal using the Czochralski process. An additional step that can be used to further increase purity is known as zone refining. In zone refining, part of a solid crystal is melted. The impurities tend to concentrate in the melted region, while the desired material recrystalizes leaving the solid material more pure and with fewer crystalline faults.

In manufacturing semiconductor devices involving heterojunctions between different semiconductor materials, the lattice constant, which is the length of the repeating element of the crystal structure, is important for determining the compatibility of materials.

  See also

  References

  1. ^ Nic, M.; Jirat, J.; Kosata, B., eds. (2006–). "semiconductor". IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology (Online ed.). DOI:10.1351/goldbook.S05591. ISBN 0-9678550-9-8. http://goldbook.iupac.org/S05591.html. 
  2. ^ Muller, Richard S.; Theodore I. Kamins (1986). Device Electronics for Integrated Circuits (2d ed.). New York: Wiley. p. 427. ISBN 0-471-88758-7. 
  3. ^ J. W. Allen (1960). "Gallium Arsenide as a semi-insulator". Nature 187 (4735): 403–405. Bibcode 1960Natur.187..403A. DOI:10.1038/187403b0. 
  4. ^ A.B Sproul, M.A Green (1991). "Improved value for the silicon intrinsic carrier concentration from 275 to 375 K". J. Appl. Phys. 70: 846. Bibcode 1991JAP....70..846S. DOI:10.1063/1.349645. 

  Further reading

  • A. A. Balandin and K. L. Wang (2006). Handbook of Semiconductor Nanostructures and Nanodevices (5-Volume Set). American Scientific Publishers. ISBN 1-58883-073-X. 
  • Sze, Simon M. (1981). Physics of Semiconductor Devices (2nd ed.). John Wiley and Sons (WIE). ISBN 0-471-05661-8. 
  • Turley, Jim (2002). The Essential Guide to Semiconductors. Prentice Hall PTR. ISBN 0-13-046404-X. 
  • Yu, Peter Y.; Cardona, Manuel (2004). Fundamentals of Semiconductors : Physics and Materials Properties. Springer. ISBN 3-540-41323-5. 

  External links

   
               

 

All translations of Semiconductor


sensagent's content

  • definitions
  • synonyms
  • antonyms
  • encyclopedia

Dictionary and translator for handheld

⇨ New : sensagent is now available on your handheld

   Advertising ▼

sensagent's office

Shortkey or widget. Free.

Windows Shortkey: sensagent. Free.

Vista Widget : sensagent. Free.

Webmaster Solution

Alexandria

A windows (pop-into) of information (full-content of Sensagent) triggered by double-clicking any word on your webpage. Give contextual explanation and translation from your sites !

Try here  or   get the code

SensagentBox

With a SensagentBox, visitors to your site can access reliable information on over 5 million pages provided by Sensagent.com. Choose the design that fits your site.

Business solution

Improve your site content

Add new content to your site from Sensagent by XML.

Crawl products or adds

Get XML access to reach the best products.

Index images and define metadata

Get XML access to fix the meaning of your metadata.


Please, email us to describe your idea.

WordGame

The English word games are:
○   Anagrams
○   Wildcard, crossword
○   Lettris
○   Boggle.

Lettris

Lettris is a curious tetris-clone game where all the bricks have the same square shape but different content. Each square carries a letter. To make squares disappear and save space for other squares you have to assemble English words (left, right, up, down) from the falling squares.

boggle

Boggle gives you 3 minutes to find as many words (3 letters or more) as you can in a grid of 16 letters. You can also try the grid of 16 letters. Letters must be adjacent and longer words score better. See if you can get into the grid Hall of Fame !

English dictionary
Main references

Most English definitions are provided by WordNet .
English thesaurus is mainly derived from The Integral Dictionary (TID).
English Encyclopedia is licensed by Wikipedia (GNU).

Copyrights

The wordgames anagrams, crossword, Lettris and Boggle are provided by Memodata.
The web service Alexandria is granted from Memodata for the Ebay search.
The SensagentBox are offered by sensAgent.

Translation

Change the target language to find translations.
Tips: browse the semantic fields (see From ideas to words) in two languages to learn more.

last searches on the dictionary :

2999 online visitors

computed in 0.078s

   Advertising ▼

Advertize

Partnership

Company informations

   Advertising ▼

Physics of Semiconductor Devices by S.M. Sze (1981, Book, Illustrated) (24.95 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Semiconductor Grab Bag 100+Pcs New Old Stock IC's, Transistors, Amps, Triacs Ect (5.99 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Semiconductor Physics and Devices : Basic Principles by Donald A. Neamen... (6.0 USD)

Commercial use of this term

LOT OF 1200 Electronic Components, IC's, Resistors, Transistors, Semiconductors (17.99 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Fundamentals of Semiconductor Devices by B.Anderson & R.Anderson(Hardcover) (60.0 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Physics and Technology of Semiconductor Devices (A Wiley international edition) (1.99 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Lot of 12: National Semiconductor DS75154N (11.11 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Physics and Technology of Semiconductor Devices (A Wiley International Edition) (11.58 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Lot of 17: National Semiconductor DS3650N (11.11 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Lot of 25: National Semiconductor DS26S10CN (11.11 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Semiconductor Physics and Devices, 4th Edition by Donald A. Neamen (44.9 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Lot of 16: National Semiconductor MM74HCT373N (11.11 USD)

Commercial use of this term

PHYSICS & TECHNOLOGY OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES - A.S. GROVE - 1967 (28.95 USD)

Commercial use of this term

Semiconductor Physics and Devices, 4th Edition by Neamen (IE) (45.0 USD)

Commercial use of this term

SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES FUNDAMENTALS BY YANG (1978) & (5.0 USD)

Commercial use of this term