semiconductor
(noun)
A substance with electrical properties intermediate between a good conductor and a good insulator.
Examples of semiconductor in the following topics:
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Radiation Detection
- Different types of radiation detectors exist ; gaseous ionization detectors, semiconductor detectors, and scintillation detectors are the most common.
- A semiconductor detector uses a semiconductor (usually silicon or germanium) to detect traversing charged particles or the absorption of photons.
- When these detectors' sensitive structures are based on single diodes, they are called semiconductor diode detectors.
- When they contain many diodes with different functions, the more general term "semiconductor detector" is used.
- Semiconductor detectors have had various applications in recent decades, in particular in gamma and x-ray spectrometry and as particle detectors.
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Dependence of Resistance on Temperature
- Note also that α is negative for semiconductors, meaning that their resistivity decreases with increasing temperature.
- This property of decreasing ρ with temperature is also related to the type and amount of impurities present in the semiconductors.
- One of the most common is the thermistor, a semiconductor crystal with a strong temperature dependence, the resistance of which is measured to obtain its temperature.
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Lasers
- Gas and semiconductors are commonly used gain media.
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Implications of Quantum Mechanics
- The study of semiconductors led to the invention of the diode and the transistor, which are indispensable parts of modern electronic systems and devices.
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The Hall Effect
- The Hall effect is a rather ubiquitous phenomenon in physics, and appears not only in conductors, but semiconductors, ionized gases, and in quantum spin among other applications.
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X-Ray Diffraction
- Now the XRD machines are equipped with semiconductor detectors.
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Electron Configurations
- In bulk materials this same idea helps explain the peculiar properties of lasers and semiconductors.
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Different Types of Currents
- Direct current may flow in a conductor such as a wire, but can also flow through semiconductors, insulators, or even through a vacuum as in electron or ion beams.