depends on what material you are using for a semi-conductor
No, silicone is not an example of a semiconductor. Silicone is a polymer material, while semiconductors are materials that have intermediate electrical conductivity between conductors and insulators, such as silicon and germanium.
an insulator doesn't allows electricity pass from it, a bad conductor allows electricity to pass from it but not fully or completely and a semi conductor pass electricity in little form which used to operate electronics
Well, nonmetals are opaque and brittle. They are also bad conductors of heat and electricity.
A hypothesis for conductors and insulators could be: "If a material allows the flow of electrical current easily, then it is a conductor. If a material inhibits the flow of electrical current, then it is an insulator."
Materials that permit electron flow are called conductors. Metals such as copper, aluminum, and gold are good conductors of electricity due to their free-moving electrons. This allows for the efficient flow of electrons through the material.
b
Semi conductors are used, usually silicon doped with some other material, which produce a low dc voltage. That's just the physics of how it works.
no
semi conductor
They are both semi conductors
To increase the conductivity of semi conductors
silicon
by their ability to accept electrons
Group 14 elements such as silicon or germanium generally act as semi-conductors. Boron, a group 13 element, normally acts as a dopant in semiconductors.
Semi-conductor is a material in which the energy band gap between the conduction band and valance energy band is very less (around 1V) which is in between conductors and insulators So, with just a an excitation energy of around 1v changes the state of semi-conductor to wither conductor or insulator .
Most metalloids are semi-conductors.
Semi-Conductors and Silicon.