🔬Condensed Matter Physics Unit 7 – Semiconductor physics
Semiconductor physics explores materials with unique electrical properties, bridging the gap between insulators and conductors. This field delves into band theory, crystal structures, and charge carriers, laying the foundation for modern electronics and optoelectronics.
From fundamental concepts to advanced applications, semiconductor physics covers doping, electrical conductivity, optical properties, and device design. Understanding these principles is crucial for developing technologies like transistors, solar cells, and integrated circuits that power our digital world.
Semiconductors materials with electrical conductivity between insulators and conductors, enabling control of current flow
Intrinsic semiconductors pure semiconductor materials without added impurities (silicon, germanium)
Extrinsic semiconductors semiconductors doped with impurities to modify their electrical properties (n-type, p-type)
Band theory describes the energy levels and allowed states of electrons in a solid, crucial for understanding semiconductor behavior
Valence band highest occupied energy band at 0 K
Conduction band lowest unoccupied energy band, separated from valence band by the band gap
Fermi level represents the energy level with a 50% probability of being occupied by an electron at thermodynamic equilibrium
Charge carriers in semiconductors electrons in the conduction band (n-type) and holes in the valence band (p-type)
Doping process of intentionally introducing impurities into a semiconductor to control its electrical properties (donor impurities for n-type, acceptor impurities for p-type)
Crystal Structure and Lattices
Semiconductors have a regular, periodic arrangement of atoms in a crystal lattice, which influences their electronic properties
Unit cell smallest repeating unit that defines the crystal structure (diamond cubic for silicon and germanium)
Lattice constant distance between two adjacent atoms in the crystal lattice, affects band structure and electronic properties
Reciprocal lattice mathematical construct representing the Fourier transform of the real-space lattice, used to describe electronic states and phonons
Brillouin zone primitive cell in the reciprocal lattice, contains all unique wave vectors describing electronic states
High-symmetry points (Γ, X, L) used to characterize the band structure and electronic properties
Lattice vibrations (phonons) collective excitations of atoms in the crystal lattice, influencing thermal and electrical properties
Defects and impurities disrupt the perfect periodicity of the crystal lattice, affecting electronic properties and device performance (point defects, line defects, surface defects)
Energy Bands and Band Gaps
Energy bands form due to the periodic potential of the crystal lattice, resulting in a range of allowed energy states for electrons
Band gap energy difference between the top of the valence band and the bottom of the conduction band, determines the electrical and optical properties of the semiconductor
Direct band gap conduction band minimum and valence band maximum occur at the same wave vector (GaAs, InP)
Indirect band gap conduction band minimum and valence band maximum occur at different wave vectors (silicon, germanium)
Effective mass tensor describes the response of an electron or hole to an applied electric field, influenced by the curvature of the energy bands
Density of states (DOS) number of electronic states per unit energy and volume, determines the concentration of charge carriers and optical absorption
Fermi-Dirac distribution probability of an electronic state being occupied at a given temperature and Fermi level, governs the concentration of electrons and holes
Temperature dependence of the band gap decreases with increasing temperature due to lattice expansion and electron-phonon interactions, affecting device performance
Strain and quantum confinement effects can modify the band structure and band gap of semiconductors, enabling band gap engineering for specific applications
Charge Carriers and Doping
Electrons and holes serve as charge carriers in semiconductors, responsible for electrical conduction
Intrinsic carrier concentration depends on the band gap and temperature, equal concentrations of electrons and holes in intrinsic semiconductors (ni)
Extrinsic semiconductors are doped with impurities to control the type and concentration of charge carriers
n-type doping introduces donor impurities (phosphorus, arsenic) that provide extra electrons to the conduction band
p-type doping introduces acceptor impurities (boron, gallium) that create holes in the valence band
Doping concentration determines the majority carrier type (electrons in n-type, holes in p-type) and influences the Fermi level position
Mobility characterizes the ease with which charge carriers move through the semiconductor under an applied electric field, affected by scattering mechanisms (lattice vibrations, ionized impurities, defects)
Drift current flow of charge carriers due to an applied electric field, proportional to the carrier concentration, mobility, and electric field strength
Diffusion current flow of charge carriers due to a concentration gradient, driven by the random thermal motion of carriers
Recombination and generation processes that balance the concentration of electrons and holes, influencing the carrier lifetime and device performance (radiative, Shockley-Read-Hall, Auger)
Electrical Properties and Conductivity
Electrical conductivity measure of a material's ability to conduct electric current, determined by the concentration and mobility of charge carriers
Intrinsic conductivity depends on the intrinsic carrier concentration and mobility, relatively low in pure semiconductors
Extrinsic conductivity enhanced by doping, depends on the concentration and mobility of majority carriers (electrons in n-type, holes in p-type)
Resistivity reciprocal of conductivity, characterizes the material's resistance to current flow, important for device design and performance
Hall effect transverse voltage generated in a conductor or semiconductor when a magnetic field is applied perpendicular to the current flow, used to determine carrier type, concentration, and mobility
Magnetoresistance change in electrical resistance due to an applied magnetic field, relevant for magnetic sensor applications and spintronics
Temperature dependence of conductivity influenced by changes in carrier concentration and mobility with temperature, important for device operation and thermal management
Ohmic contacts metal-semiconductor junctions with linear current-voltage characteristics, essential for efficient current injection and extraction in devices
Schottky contacts metal-semiconductor junctions with rectifying current-voltage characteristics, used in diodes, solar cells, and transistors
Optical Properties of Semiconductors
Absorption process by which a semiconductor absorbs photons, exciting electrons from the valence band to the conduction band
Direct absorption occurs in semiconductors with a direct band gap, enabling efficient light absorption and emission (GaAs, InP)
Indirect absorption requires the assistance of phonons to conserve momentum, resulting in weaker absorption and emission (silicon, germanium)
Photoluminescence emission of light from a semiconductor due to the recombination of electrons and holes, used to study band structure, defects, and impurities
Refractive index describes the speed of light in a material relative to vacuum, important for optical device design and light propagation
Optical band gap energy threshold for photon absorption, determining the wavelength range of light-matter interaction
Excitons bound electron-hole pairs formed by Coulomb attraction, influencing optical absorption and emission spectra, particularly at low temperatures
Quantum confinement effects modification of optical properties in nanostructures (quantum wells, wires, dots) due to the confinement of charge carriers, enabling the tuning of absorption and emission wavelengths
Nonlinear optical properties describe the response of a semiconductor to high-intensity light, relevant for applications in optical switching, frequency conversion, and signal processing
Semiconductor Devices and Applications
p-n junction formed by joining p-type and n-type semiconductors, creating a built-in electric field and depletion region, fundamental building block of many semiconductor devices
Diodes allow current flow in one direction (forward bias) and block it in the reverse direction, used for rectification, voltage regulation, and light emission (LEDs)
Solar cells convert light into electrical energy by separating photogenerated electron-hole pairs across the p-n junction
Bipolar junction transistors (BJTs) three-terminal devices consisting of two p-n junctions (npn or pnp), used for amplification and switching applications
Field-effect transistors (FETs) three-terminal devices that control current flow using an electric field, essential for modern electronics (MOSFETs, JFETs, HEMTs)
Metal-oxide-semiconductor FETs (MOSFETs) utilize an insulated gate to control the conductivity of a channel between source and drain terminals, the backbone of digital logic and memory devices
Optoelectronic devices convert between electrical and optical signals, enabling applications in telecommunications, displays, and sensing (LEDs, lasers, photodetectors)
Power electronics devices handle high voltages and currents, used in power conversion, motor control, and renewable energy systems (power diodes, thyristors, IGBTs)
Integrated circuits (ICs) miniaturized electronic circuits fabricated on a semiconductor substrate, enabling complex functionality and high-density packaging (microprocessors, memory chips, ASICs)
Advanced Topics and Current Research
Wide bandgap semiconductors materials with bandgaps larger than 2 eV (GaN, SiC, diamond), offering advantages in high-power, high-frequency, and high-temperature applications
Organic semiconductors carbon-based materials with semiconducting properties, enabling flexible, low-cost, and environmentally friendly electronics (OLEDs, OPVs, OFETs)
Spintronics exploitation of electron spin for information processing and storage, promising for low-power and high-density devices (spin valves, magnetic tunnel junctions)
Topological insulators materials with insulating bulk but conducting surface states protected by time-reversal symmetry, potential applications in quantum computing and spintronics
2D semiconductors atomically thin materials with unique electronic and optical properties (graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides), suitable for flexible and transparent electronics
Perovskite semiconductors emerging class of materials with excellent optoelectronic properties, particularly promising for high-efficiency solar cells and light-emitting devices
Neuromorphic computing hardware implementations inspired by biological neural networks, utilizing semiconductor devices to mimic brain-like functionality and efficiency (memristors, synaptic transistors)
Quantum computing harnessing quantum phenomena (superposition, entanglement) for computation, with potential applications in cryptography, optimization, and simulation (superconducting qubits, spin qubits)