Charge carrier density explained

Charge carrier density, also known as carrier concentration, denotes the number of charge carriers per volume. In SI units, it is measured in m−3. As with any density, in principle it can depend on position. However, usually carrier concentration is given as a single number, and represents the average carrier density over the whole material.

Charge carrier densities involve equations concerning the electrical conductivity, related phenomena like the thermal conductivity, and chemicals bonds like covalent bond.

Calculation

The carrier density is usually obtained theoretically by integrating the density of states over the energy range of charge carriers in the material (e.g. integrating over the conduction band for electrons, integrating over the valence band for holes).

If the total number of charge carriers is known, the carrier density can be found by simply dividing by the volume. To show this mathematically, charge carrier density is a particle density, so integrating it over a volume

V

gives the number of charge carriers

N

in that volumeN=\int_V n(\mathbf r) \,dV.where

n(r)

is the position-dependent charge carrier density.

If the density does not depend on position and is instead equal to a constant

n0

this equation simplifies toN = V \cdot n_0.

Semiconductors

The carrier density is important for semiconductors, where it is an important quantity for the process of chemical doping. Using band theory, the electron density,

n0

is number of electrons per unit volume in the conduction band. For holes,

p0

is the number of holes per unit volume in the valence band. To calculate this number for electrons, we start with the idea that the total density of conduction-band electrons,

n0

, is just adding up the conduction electron density across the different energies in the band, from the bottom of the band

Ec

to the top of the band

Etop

.

n_0 = \int_^N(E) \, dE

Because electrons are fermions, the density of conduction electrons at any particular energy,

N(E)

is the product of the density of states,

g(E)

or how many conducting states are possible, with the Fermi–Dirac distribution,

f(E)

which tells us the portion of those states which will actually have electrons in themN(E) = g(E) f(E)

In order to simplify the calculation, instead of treating the electrons as fermions, according to the Fermi–Dirac distribution, we instead treat them as a classical non-interacting gas, which is given by the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution. This approximation has negligible effects when the magnitude

|E-Ef|\ggkBT

, which is true for semiconductors near room temperature. This approximation is invalid at very low temperatures or an extremely small band-gap.

f(E)=\frac \approx e^

The three-dimensional density of states is:g(E) = \frac \left(\frac\right)^\frac\sqrt

After combination and simplification, these expressions lead to:

n_0 = 2 \left(\frac\right)^ e^

Here

m*

is the effective mass of the electrons in that particular semiconductor, and the quantity

Ec-Ef

is the difference in energy between the conduction band and the Fermi level, which is half the band gap,

Eg

:

E_g=2(E_c-E_f)

A similar expression can be derived for holes. The carrier concentration can be calculated by treating electrons moving back and forth across the bandgap just like the equilibrium of a reversible reaction from chemistry, leading to an electronic mass action law. The mass action law defines a quantity

ni

called the intrinsic carrier concentration, which for undoped materials:

n_i=n_0=p_0

The following table lists a few values of the intrinsic carrier concentration for intrinsic semiconductors, in order of increasing band gap.

MaterialCarrier density (1/cm3) at 300K
Germanium[1]
Silicon[2]
Gallium Arsenide[3]
3C-SiC[4]
6H-SiC
4H-SiC
Gallium nitride
Diamond

These carrier concentrations will change if these materials are doped. For example, doping pure silicon with a small amount of phosphorus will increase the carrier density of electrons, n. Then, since n > p, the doped silicon will be a n-type extrinsic semiconductor. Doping pure silicon with a small amount of boron will increase the carrier density of holes, so then p > n, and it will be a p-type extrinsic semiconductor.

Metals

The carrier density is also applicable to metals, where it can be estimated from the simple Drude model. In this case, the carrier density (in this context, also called the free electron density) can be estimated by:[5]

n=\frac

Where

NA

is the Avogadro constant, Z is the number of valence electrons,

\rhom

is the density of the material, and

ma

is the atomic mass. Since metals can display multiple oxidation numbers, the exact definition of how many "valence electrons" an element should have in elemental form is somewhat arbitrary, but the following table lists the free electron densities given in Ashcroft and Mermin, which were calculated using the formula above based on reasonable assumptions about valence,

Z

, and with mass densities,

\rhom

calculated from experimental crystallography data.[5]
MaterialNumber of valence electronsCarrier density (1/cm3) at 300K
Copper1
Silver1
Gold1
Beryllium2
Magnesium2
Calcium2
Strontium2
Barium2
Niobium1
Iron2
Manganese2
Zinc2
Cadmium2
Aluminum3
Gallium3
Indium3
Thallium3
Tin4
Lead4
Bismuth5
Antimony5

The values for n among metals inferred for example by the Hall effect are often on the same orders of magnitude, but this simple model cannot predict carrier density to very high accuracy.

Measurement

The density of charge carriers can be determined in many cases using the Hall effect,[6] the voltage of which depends inversely on the carrier density.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Group IV Elements, IV-IV and III-V Compounds. Part b – Electronic, Transport, Optical and Other Properties. O. Madelung, U. Rössler, M. Schulz. 1–3. 10.1007/10832182_503. Germanium (Ge), intrinsic carrier concentration. Landolt-Börnstein – Group III Condensed Matter. 2002. 978-3-540-42876-3.
  2. Reassessment of the intrinsic carrier density in crystalline silicon in view of band-gap narrowing. Pietro P. Altermatt, Andreas Schenk, Frank Geelhaar, Gernot Heiser. Journal of Applied Physics. 93. 3. 1598. 2003. 10.1063/1.1529297. 2003JAP....93.1598A.
  3. Book: 10.1007/10832182_196. Group IV Elements, IV-IV and III-V Compounds. Part b – Electronic, Transport, Optical and Other Properties. 1–8. Landolt-Börnstein – Group III Condensed Matter. 2002. 978-3-540-42876-3. Rössler. U.. Gallium arsenide (GaAs), intrinsic carrier concentration, electrical and thermal conductivity.
  4. Book: Gachovska . Tanya K. . Hudgins . Jerry L. . Power Electronics Handbook . SiC and GaN Power Semiconductor Devices . Elsevier . 2018 . 10.1016/b978-0-12-811407-0.00005-2 . 98. 9780128114070 .
  5. Book: Solid State Physics. Ashcroft, Mermin. 4–5.
  6. On a New Action of the Magnet on Electric Currents. Edwin Hall. Edwin Hall. American Journal of Mathematics. 2. 1879. 287–92. 10.2307/2369245 . 3. 2369245 . 107500183 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110727010116/http://www.stenomuseet.dk/skoletj/elmag/kilde9.html. 2011-07-27 . hallpdf.