Extrinsic Semiconductor - Use of Extrinsic Semiconductors

Use of Extrinsic Semiconductors

Extrinsic semiconductors are components of many common electrical devices. A semiconductor diode (devices that allow current in only one direction) consists of p-type and n-type semiconductors placed in junction with one another. Currently, most semiconductor diodes use doped silicon or germanium.

Transistors (devices that enable current switching) also make use of extrinsic semiconductors. Bipolar junction transistors (BJT) are one type of transistor. The most common BJTs are NPN and PNP type. NPN transistors have two layers of n-type semiconductors sandwiching a p-type semiconductor. PNP transistors have two layers of p-type semiconductors sandwiching an n-type semiconductor.

Field-effect transistors (FET) are another type of transistor implementing extrinsic semiconductors. As opposed to BJTs, they are unipolar and considered either N-channel or P-channel. FETs are broken into two families, junction gate FET (JFET) and insulated gate FET (IGFET).

Other devices implementing the extrinsic semiconductor:

  • Lasers
  • Solar cells
  • Photodetectors
  • Light-emitting diodes
  • Thyristors

Read more about this topic:  Extrinsic Semiconductor

Famous quotes containing the word extrinsic:

    Authors communicate with the people by some special extrinsic mark; I am the first to do so by my entire being, as Michel de Montaigne.
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)