A Conversation for Semiconductors for beginners

Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 1

Spelugx the Beige, Wizard, Perl, Thaumatologically Challenged

Entry: Semiconductors for beginners - A687143
Author: S'pe;lug:x // Researcher, Ace!, Scout, Guru, ... // (1+8-3)×(1-1+7)=42 1.7 // see A672554, now a Guru! - U183117

This entry was in the Flea Market for a while, so I've grabbed it, copied it and have now poped it into PR.

Rip it to shreds!


Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 2

Monsignore Pizzafunghi Bosselese

I won't rip it but how about adding a section about bipolar transistors?


Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 3

Felonious Monk - h2g2s very own Bogeyman

I think a bigger section on transistors in general would help the article a lot. Also something about what these various devices are made out of, eg GaAlAs for LED's, GaN for blue led's etc, and why (direct versus indirect gap semiconductors). I'd also like to see mention about the concept of the Fermi level.


Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 4

Monsignore Pizzafunghi Bosselese



Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 5

Spelugx the Beige, Wizard, Perl, Thaumatologically Challenged

Bossel: this has moved to F48874?thread=167150 after this thread was somehow removed from PR, with luck this entry might receive some TLC this weekend.


Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 6

Monsignore Pizzafunghi Bosselese

Yes I know. But I knew that somewhere out there I already had posted something with regard to transistors smiley - erm


Peer Review: A687143 - Semiconductors for beginners

Post 7

Just zis Guy, you know? † Cyclist [A690572] :: At the 51st centile of ursine intelligence

Sorry, but Ohms/cm is a b*****d unit. The SI unit of length is the metre. The centimetre is a deprecated derived unit. The correct unit is ?/m.

This is a pretty good entry. My only quibbles are stylistic - for example doping is not a "trick up the sleeve" of semiconductors, it's a way of turning natural insulators into conductors.


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