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Energy Band View of Semiconductors

Conductors, semiconductors, insulators: Why is it that


when individual atoms get close together to form a
solid such as copper, silicon, or quartz they form
materials that have a high, variable, or low ability to
conduct current?
Understand in terms of allowed, empty, and occupied
electronic energy levels and electronic energy bands.
Fig. 1 shows the calculated allowed energy levels for
electrons (vertical axis) versus distance between
atoms (horizontal axis) for materials like silicon.

Fig. 1. Calculated energy levels in the diamond structure as


a function of assumed atomic spacing at T = 0o K. (From
Introduction to Semiconductor Physics, Wiley, 1964)

In Fig. 1, at right atoms are essentially isolated; at left


atomic separations are just a few tenths of a
nanometer, characteristic of atoms in a silicon crystal.
If we start with N atoms of silicon at the right,
which have 14 electrons each, there must be 14N
allowed energy levels for the electrons. (You
learned about this in physics in connection with the
Bohr atom, the Pauli Exclusion principle, etc.)
If the atoms are pushed together to form a solid
chunk of silicon, the electrons of neighboring atoms
will interact and the allowed energy levels will
broaden into energy bands.

When the actual spacing is reached, the


quantum-mechanical calculation results are that:
at lowest energies very narrow ranges of energy
are allowed for inner electrons (these are core
electrons, near the nuclei);
a higher band of 4N allowed states exists that, at
0oK, is filled with 4N electrons;
then an energy gap, EG, appears with no allowed
states (no electrons permitted!); and
at highest energies a band of allowed states
appears that is entirely empty at 0oK.

Can this crystal conduct electricity?

NO, it cannot conductor electricity at 0o K


because that involves moving charges and
therefore an increase of electron energy but
we have only two bands of states separated
by a forbidden energy gap, EG. The (lower)
valence band is entirely filled, and the (upper)
conduction band states are entirely empty.

To conduct electricity we need to have a


band that has some filled states (some
electrons!) and some empty states that
can be occupied by electrons whose
energies increase.

Fig. 2 shows the situation at 0o K for (left) a


metallic solid such as copper, and (right) a
semiconductor such as silicon.
The metal can conduct at 0o K because the
uppermost band contains some electrons and
some empty available energy states. The
semiconductor cannot conduct it is an insulator.
If we raise the temperature of the semiconductor,
some electrons in the filled valence band may
pick up enough energy to jump up into an
unoccupied state in the conduction band. Thus,
at a finite temperature, a pure (intrinsic)
semiconductor has a finite electrical conductivity.

Fig. 2. Electronic energy bands for (a) metallic conductor


at T = 0o K; (b) insulator or intrinsic semiconductor at 0 o K.

How much conductivity can a pure (intrinsic)


semiconductor exhibit?
This depends on how much thermal energy
there is and the size of the energy gap, EG:
Mean thermal energy is kT, where k =

Boltzmanns constant = 1.38 x 10-23 J/K and T


is the absolute temperature.
In electron volts this is kT/qe, or 26 millivolts
for room temperature (300o K)
For silicon, EG = 1.12 eV at 300o K
This leads in pure (intrinsic) Si to a carrier
concentration ni = 1010 carriers/cm3 at 300o K

Adding Impurities (Doping) to Adjust


Carrier Concentrations

Adjust carrier concentrations locally in semiconductor by


adding easily ionized impurities to produce mobile electrons
and/or holes
To make silicon N-type:
Add valence 5 phosphorous (P) atoms to valence 4
silicon. Fifth electron is easily freed from the atom by a
little thermal energy (0.045 eV for phosphorous) to create
(donate) a mobile electron. Fig. 3a shows the donor energy
level just below bottom of conduction band.
To make silicon P-type:
Add valence 3 boron (B) to silicon. An electron at the top
of the valence band can pick up enough thermal energy to
release it from the silicon so it attaches to a boron atom,
completing its outer ring of electrons. In the band picture, Fig.
3b, this is represented by an acceptor. energy level 0.045 eV
above the top of the valence band.

Fig. 3a. Electronic energy band for n-type semiconductor


(Ge) with donors only.

Fig. 3b. Electronic energy band for p-type semiconductor


(Ge) with acceptors only.

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