Semi Conductors: Silicon(Si) and Graphite
Super-conductors: Copper,steel,Human beings and Earth itself.
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Superconductors have no resistance. Conductors have low resistance, semiconductors have intermediate resistance, and insulators have high resistance.
Superconductors have the lowest resistance of all materials, with resistance dropping to zero when they are cooled below a certain critical temperature. Conductors have lower resistance than semiconductors and insulators, which have significantly higher resistance and do not conduct electricity as effectively.
Germenium and silicon are the examples of Semiconductors.
Superconductors have no resistance, making them the best conductors. Semiconductors have moderate resistance. Conductors have low resistance, making them better conductors than insulators, which have high resistance, making them the poorest conductors.
A. A. Galkin has written: 'Fizika tverdogo tela' -- subject(s): Semiconductors, Solid state physics, Superconductors
If you mean superconductors, no not yet. The best so far are the copper oxide ceramic superconductors that work at liquid nitrogen temperatures.I know of nothing called a "magnetic semiconductor".
I don't think so. Semiconductor processing requires very clean steps. and superconductors require the use of heavy metals, which can contaminate the process. Besides, superconductors require special equipment that does not exist in the semiconductor industry. The cost of introducing superconducting materials outweighs the benefits of using the materials. Perhaps one day, superconductors and semiconductors can co-exist in an integrated circuit. If the question is about whether superconductors are involved in fabricating transistors (meaning the fabrication equipment), I don't see a need -- we can make do with what we have.
Conductor are materials that conduct electricity. There are also semiconductors, which conduct electricity but not as well, and superconductors, which conduct electricity without resistance when very cold.
Here you go Lanthanum Zinc Titanium Cadmium Uranium Please thank me for simplicity!
Examples of p-type semiconductors include materials like boron-doped silicon, gallium arsenide, and aluminum gallium arsenide. These materials have a deficiency of electrons, leading to "holes" in the crystal lattice that behave as positive charges.
Examples are: solar cells, semiconductors, pigments, vulcanization, etc.
Because at present all superconductors must be super-cooled in a coolant such as liquid nitrogen to become superconductors.