Title: EE 362 Electric and Magnetic Properties of Materials
1EE 362 Electric and Magnetic Properties of
Materials
- Dr. Brian T. Hemmelman
- Chapter 1 Slides
2Types of Materials (2)
- Materials can be classified as
- Conductors Easily conduct current
- Insulators Do not conduct significant current
- Semiconductors Conductivity between conductors
and insulators - Superconductors Zero resistance below critical
temperature
3Types of Materials (3)
- Specialty areas concerned with liquid, gaseous,
and plasma states (LCDs, gas lasers, plasma
hydrodynamics). - Most current electronic materials though are
solids.
4Types of Solids (4)
- Crystalline Have ordered atomic or molecular
structure throughout. - Polycrystalline Have order within grains, but
grain orientation is random. - Amorphous Have no order or very short range
order.
5Types of Solids (5)
6Solid Electronic Materials (6)
- Conductors insulators, amorphous
polycrystalline organic materials are all
important. - We will focus on crystalline semiconductors
(diodes, transistors, CCDs, solar cells, etc.).
7Crystalline Semiconductors (7)
- Elemental Semiconductors Composed of only one
element - Silicon Si
- Germanium Ge
- Compound Semiconductors Composed of two or more
different elements - Gallium Arsenide GaAs
- Indium Phosphide - InP
8Crystal Structures (8)
- Unit Cell A small volume that can be used to
reproduce the entire crystal (through translation
only, no rotation). - Primitive Cell Smallest unit cell that can be
used to repeat (not always the most appropriate
to visualize or describe a crystal structure).
9Primitive Unit Cell (9)
All equivalent lattice sites can be found with
where p, q, and s are integers.
10The 14 Bravais Lattices (10)
11The 14 Bravais Lattices (11)
12The 14 Bravais Lattices (12)
13The 14 Bravais Lattices (13)
14The 14 Bravais Lattices (14)
15Silicon A Diamond Lattice (15)
Two interpenetrating face-centered cubic lattices
16Gallium Arsenide Zincblende (16)
a is defined as the lattice constant (usually
in Angstroms)
17The Diamond/Zincblende Lattice (17)
- http//web.cecs.pdx.edu/vanhalen/courses/applets/
silicon.html
18Miller Indices (18)
- We need to keep track of atomic planes and
orientations inside the crystal. - Miller indices are a way to reference these
atomic planes and directions. - We use the intercepts of the unit cell in terms
of the integers p, q, and s.
19Typical Crystal Planes (19)
20Determining Miller Indices (20)
- Find x, y, z axis intercepts in terms of
integer unit quantities (does not have to be in
terms of lattice constant a).These intercepts
are (d e f). - Invert each member of the triplet
21Determining Miller Indices (21)
- Multiply through by smallest integer needed to
make all values in the triplet into
integers.The resulting integers are the Miller
indices (h k l).
22Determining Miller Indices (22)
- Determine intercepts(1 3 1)
- Invert each of these(1/1 1/3 1/1)
- Multiply through by 3 to convert all values to
integers(3 1 3) - This is a (3 1 3) plane.
23Determining Miller Indices (23)
- Determine intercepts(4 2 4)
- Invert each of these(1/4 1/2 1/4)
- Multiply through by 4 to convert all values to
integers(1 2 1) - This is a (1 2 1) plane
24Crystal Directions (24)
- Crystal directions are also defined based on
Miller indices. - A crystal direction is defined by a vector that
is normal (perpendicular) to the crystal plane
defined by a particular set of Miller indices.
25Crystal Directions (25)
26Atomic Surface Density Example (26)
Total number of atoms in this area is 1 4(1/4)
2 atoms Surface area is (a1)(1.414a1)
1.414a12 If the lattice constant is a1 5
Angstroms 510-8 cm then Surface density is (2
atoms)/(1.414(510-8 cm)2) 5.661014 atoms/cm2
27Silicon Ingot Wafers (27)
28Atomic Bonds (28)
- Ionic Bonding Some atoms lose electrons
(become ion) and some atoms gain electrons
(become - ion).Usually atoms from opposite
sides of the periodic chart form ionic bonds.
For example, sodium chloride (NaCl).
29Atomic Bonds (29)
- Covalent Bonding Atoms share electrons to
form complete outer shells.Usually atoms from
middle groups of the periodic chart, e.g. Group
III Group V, but also hydrogen molecule.
30Atomic Bonds (30)
- Metallic Bonds Many atoms with few valence
electrons (Groups I, II, and III) cluster to
share electrons and achieve a low energy
state.Essentially becomes a bunch of nuclei
surrounded by a sea of loosely bound electrons.
31Atomic Bonds (31)
- Van der Waals Some compounds may form through
ionic bonds, but this can create an imbalance of
charge in the molecule and establish a dipole
(e.g. HF).There can then be electrostatic
interactions between molecular dipoles that cause
the molecules to cluster into a solid.