A semiconductor is a material whose electrical conductivity properties fall between that of a conductor and that of an insulator.
Germenium and silicon are the examples of Semiconductors.
Those semiconductors in which some impurity atoms are embedded are known as extrinsic semiconductors.
power semiconductorspower semiconductors can drive large currents during forward biassemiconductorsemiconductors drive small currents during forward bias
many of them.
Commonly doped silicon is used to make semiconductors, but advancements in organic electronics now mean that semiconductors can be made from molecules made from elements such as carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulphur, nitrogen and a few others.
Application of semiconductors
Transistors are made out of semiconductors, yes.
semiconductors
NXP Semiconductors was created in 2006.
The population of NXP Semiconductors is 28,150.
The population of Horizon Semiconductors is 120.
The population of Horizon Semiconductors is 2,007.
Metalloids when used is electronics are called semiconductors.
J. Tauc has written: 'Photo and thermoelectric effects in semiconductors' -- subject(s): Crystals, Electric properties, Photoelectricity, Semiconductors, Thermoelectricity 'Amorphous and liquid semiconductors' -- subject(s): Amorphous semiconductors, Liquid semiconductors
No, compound semiconductors do not behave as intrinsic semiconductors because they have different band structures due to the combination of different elements. Compound semiconductors have unique electrical properties that make them suitable for specific applications that require different performance characteristics compared to intrinsic semiconductors.
Not sure what you mean by the description, but try an electrical/electronics components stockist.
Germenium and silicon are the examples of Semiconductors.