If an electron deficient material such as boron is present, then
the material is called
p-type silicon, and the hole
concentration is just
the concentration of
acceptors , since
these atoms "accept" electrons from the valence band.
If both donors and acceptors are in the material, then whichever one has the higher concentration wins out. (This is called
compensation .) If there are more donors than
acceptors then the material is n-type and
. If there are more acceptors than donors then the
material is p-type and
. It should be noted that in most compensated
material, one type of impurity usually has a much greater(several order of magnitude) concentration than the other, and
so the subtraction process described above usually does notchange things very much. (
).
One other fact which you might find useful is that, again,because of quantum mechanics, it turns out that the
product of the electron and hole
concentration in a material must remain a constant. In siliconat room temperature:
Thus, if we have an n-type sample of silicon doped with
donors per cubic centimeter, then
, the electron concentration is
just and
, the hole
concentration, is
. The carriers which dominate a material are called
majority carriers , which would be the electrons in
the above example. The other carriers are called
minority
carriers (the holes in the example) and while
might not seem like much compared to
the presence of minority carriers is still quite
important and can not be ignored. Note that if the material isundoped, then it must be that
and
.
The picture of "cups" of different allowed energy
levels is useful for gaining a pictorial understanding of whatis going on in a semiconductor, but becomes somewhat awkward
when you want to start looking at devices which are made up ofboth n and p type silicon. Thus, we will introduce one more way
of describing what is going on in our material. The pictureshown in
is called a band diagram. A
band diagram is just a representation of the energy
as a function of position with a semiconductor device. In aband diagram, positive energy for electrons is upward, while for
holes, positive energy is downwards. That is, if an electron moves
upward , its potential energy
increases just as a with a normal mass in a gravitational field. Also, just as a mass will "fall down" if given a chance, an electron will move down a slope shown in a band diagram. On the other hand, holes gain energy by moving
downward and so they have a tendancy to "float" upward if given the chance - much like a bubble in a liquid.
The line labeled
in
shows
the edge of the conduction band, or the bottom of the lowestunoccupied allowed band, while
is the top edge of the valence, or
highest occupied band. The band gap,
for the material is obviously
. The dotted line labeled
is called the
Fermi
level and it tells us something about the chemical
equilibrium energy of the material, and also something about thetype and number of carriers in the material. More on this later. Note that there is
no zero energy level on a diagram such as this. We often useeither the Fermi level or one or other of the band edges as a
reference level on lieu of knowing exactly where "zero energy" is located.
An electron band-diagram for a semiconductor The distance (in energy) between the Fermi level and either
and
gives us information concerning the
density of electrons and holes in that region of thesemiconductor material. The details, once again, will have to
be begged off on grounds of mathematical complexity. (TakeSemiconductor Devices (ELEC 462) in your senior year and find
out how is really works!) It turns out that you can say:
Both
and
are constants that depend on the material you are
talking about, but are typically on the order of
. The expression in the denominator of the exponential
is just Boltzman's constant,
,
times the temperature
of the
material (in absolute temperature or Kelvin).
Boltzman's constant
. At room temperature
of an electron volt. Look carefully at the numerators
in the exponential. Note first that there is a minus sign infront, which means the bigger the number in the exponent, the
fewer carriers we have. Thus, the top expression says that ifwe have n-type material, then
must not be too far away from the conduction band,
while if we have p-type material, then the Fermi level,
must be down close to the valence band. The closer
gets to
the more electrons we have. The closer
gets to
, the more holes we have.
therefore must be for a sample of n-type material. Note also
that if we know how heavily a sample is doped (That is, we knowwhat
is for example) and from the fact that
we can use
to find out how far away
the Fermi level is from the conduction band
To help further in our ability to picture what is
going on, we will often add to this band diagram, some smallsigned circles to indicate the presence of mobile electrons and
holes in the material. Note that the electrons are spread out inenergy. From our "cups" picture we know they like to stay in
the lower energy states if possible, but some will bedistributed into the higher levels as well. What is distorted
here is the scale. The band-gap for silicon is 1.1 eV, whilethe
actual spread of the electrons would
probably only be a few tenths of an eV, not nearly as much as isshown in
. Lets look at a sample of p-type
material, just for comparison. Note that for holes, increasingenergy goes
down not up, so their
distribution is inverted from that of the electrons. You cankind of think of holes as bubbles in a glass of soda or beer,
they want to float to the top if they can. Note also for both nand p-type material there are also a few "minority" carriers, or
carriers of the opposite type, which arise from thermalgeneration across the band-gap.
Band diagram for an n-type semiconductor