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Electronic Devices and Communication Systems Test - 3

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Electronic Devices and Communication Systems Test - 3
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Weekly Quiz Competition
  • Question 1
    1 / -0

    In the case of semiconductors the valence and conduction bands have

    Solution

    The materials can be classified by the energy gap between their valence band and the conduction band. The valence band is the band consisting of the valence electron, and the conduction band remains empty. Conduction takes place when an electron jumps from valence band to conduction band and the gap between these two bands is forbidden energy gap. Wider the gap between the valence and conduction bands, higher the energy it requires for shifting an electron from valence band to the conduction band.

    • In the case of conductors, this energy gap is absent or in other words conduction band, and valence band overlaps each other. Thus, electron requires minimum energy to jump from valence band. The typical examples of conductors are Silver, Copper, and Aluminium.
    • In insulators, this gap is vast. Therefore, it requires a significant amount of energy to shift an electron from valence to conduction band. Thus, insulators are poor conductors of electricity. Mica and Ceramic are the well-known examples of insulation material.
    • Semiconductors, on the other hand, have an energy gap which is in between that of conductors and insulators. This gap is typically more or less 1 eV, and thus, one electron requires energy more than conductors but less than insulators for shifting valence band to conduction band.

     

  • Question 2
    1 / -0

    Motion of hole is a convenient way of describing

    Solution

    The holes are just the abscence of a electron in a energy band. But its easier to describe the abscence of a electron as a single moving positive charge than it is to describe the motion of all the other electrons in the band.

    In a band you have N electrons. Remove one of those electrons(by for instance p-doping) and you have N-1 electrons left. Now you can either choose to describe this with the behavior of those N-1 electrons. Or you can choose to describe it as if there is one single hole moving around in the band.
    So mathematicly the holes behave just like a positivly charged electron.

     

  • Question 3
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    Choose the correct statement.

  • Question 4
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    In a pure, or intrinsic, semiconductor, valence band holes and conduction-band electrons are always present

    Solution

    An intrinsic semiconductor, also called an undoped semiconductor or i-type semiconductor, is a pure semiconductor without any significant dopant species present. The number of charge carriers is therefore determined by the properties of the material itself instead of the amount of impurities. In intrinsic semiconductors the number of excited electrons and the number of holes are equal: n = p.

     

  • Question 5
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    Carbon, silicon and germanium atoms have four valence electrons each. Their valence and conduction bands are separated by energy band gaps represented by (Eg)C, (Eg)Si and (Eg)Ge, respectively. Which of the following relationships is true in their case?

  • Question 6
    1 / -0

    An n-type semiconductor is

  • Question 7
    1 / -0

    doping of semiconductor is the process of

    Solution

    Doping is the process of adding impurities to intrinsic semiconductors to alter their properties. Normally Trivalent and Pentavalent elements are used to dope Silicon and Germanium. When an intrinsic semiconductor is doped with Trivalent impurity it becomes a P-Type semiconductor.

     

  • Question 8
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    Which of the following properties does not characterise a semiconductor?

  • Question 9
    1 / -0

    In n-type semiconductor the fifth electron

    Solution

    When we add a small quantity of impurity in a semiconductor than the impurity contributes either free electrons or holes to the semiconductor. As a result, the conducting property of semiconductor changes. The process of changing the conductive property of semiconductor by adding impurities is known as doping.

    Suppose, in any pure or intrinsic germanium or silicon semiconductor any pentavalent impurity is added. The pentavalent impurities are those which have atoms with five (5) valence electrons. As soon as we add the impurity to the semiconductor, the impurity atoms will replace some of the semiconductor atoms in the crystal structure.

    Now four (4) of the five (5) valance electrons of impurity atom will involve in bonding with four neighborhood semiconductor atoms, but the fifth one electron will not find any place to occupy.

    This fifth electron of the impurity atom can be made available as free electron or negative charge carrier even if a very small amount of energy is applied.

     

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