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(I) Insulators: (I) Insulators (Ii) Conductors (Iii) Semiconductors Related Articles

Solid state materials can be classified as insulators, semiconductors, or conductors based on their electrical conductivity and electron configuration. Insulators have no free electrons and very low conductivity below 10-8S/cm. Conductors have overlapping valence and conduction bands, allowing many free electrons and high conductivity above 103S/cm. Semiconductors have properties between insulators and conductors, with a narrow energy gap between bands and moderate conductivity ranging from 10-8S/cm to 103S/cm.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
95 views2 pages

(I) Insulators: (I) Insulators (Ii) Conductors (Iii) Semiconductors Related Articles

Solid state materials can be classified as insulators, semiconductors, or conductors based on their electrical conductivity and electron configuration. Insulators have no free electrons and very low conductivity below 10-8S/cm. Conductors have overlapping valence and conduction bands, allowing many free electrons and high conductivity above 103S/cm. Semiconductors have properties between insulators and conductors, with a narrow energy gap between bands and moderate conductivity ranging from 10-8S/cm to 103S/cm.

Uploaded by

Tanmay Hazra
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Solid state materials can be classified into three groups: insulators, semiconductors and

conductors. Insulators have no free charge carriers available with them under normal conditions.
Conducting materials have plenty of free electrons available for electric conduction. A semiconductor
material is one whose electrical properties lie in between those of insulators and good conductors.

Insulators are materials having an electrical conductivity less than 10-8S/cm (like diamond: 10-


16
S/cm); semiconductors have a conductivity between 10-8S/cm and 103S/cm (for silicon it can range
from 10-5S/cm  to 103S/cm ); at last conductors are materials with high conductivities, greater
than 103S/cm :(like silver: 106S/cm.)

The electrical conduction properties of different elements and compounds can be explained in terms
of the electrons having energies in the valence and conduction bands. The electrons lying in the lower
energy bands. which are normally filled. play no part in the conduction process. 

(i) Insulators

Table of Contents

 (i) Insulators
 (ii) Conductors
 (iii) Semiconductors
 Related Articles

Stated simply. insulators are those materials in which valence electrons are bound very tightly to their
parents atoms, thus requiring very large electric field to remove them from the attraction of their
nuclei. In other words, insulators have no free charge carriers available with them under normal
conditions. 

In terms of energy bands, it means that insulators [Fig(a)] have a full valence band, 

1. have an empty conduction band, 


2. have a large energy gap (of several eV) between them and 
3. at ordinary temperatures, the probability of electrons from full valence band gaining sufficient
energy so as to surmount energy gap and thus become available for conduction in the
conduction band, is slight. 

[[
This is shown in Fig(a). For conduction to take place, electrons must be given sufficient energy to
jump from the valence band to the conduction band. Increase in temperature enables some electrons
to go to the conduction band which fact accounts for the negative resistance temperature coefficient of
insulators. 

(ii) Conductors

Put in a simple way, conducting materials are those in which plenty of free electrons are available for
electric conduction. 

In terms of energy bands, it means that electrical conductors are those which have overlapping
valence and conduction bands as shown in Fig (b). 

In fact, there is no physical distinction between the two bands. Hence, the availability of a large
number of conduction electrons. 

Another point worth noting is that in the absence of forbidden energy gap in good conductors, there is
no structure to establish holes. The total current in such conductors is simply allow of electrons. It is
exactly for this reason that the existence of holes was not discovered until semiconductors were
studied thoroughly. 

(iii) Semiconductors

A semiconductor material is one whose electrical properties lie in between those of insulators and
good conductors. Examples are : germanium and silicon. 

In terms of energy bands, semiconductors can be defined as those materials which have almost an
empty conduction band and almost filled valence band with a very narrow energy gap (of the order of
1 eV) separating the two. 

At 0°K, there are no electrons in the conduction band and the valence band is completely filled.
However, with increase in temperature, width of the forbidden energy bands is decreased so
that some of the electrons are liberated into the conduction band In other words, conductivity of
semiconductors increases with temperature. 

Moreover, such departing electrons leave behind positive holes in the valence band. Hence,
semiconductor current is the sum of electron and hole currents flowing in opposite directions. 

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