Ezio3.1415 said:
Look at the picture... Here current is flowing through a semiconductor... First think about holes... The holes will pile up on the upside... But if you think about electrons then the electrons also pile up on the upside... What's wrong here?
Is it wrong because it is more appropriate to think of current as positive holes moving rather than negative electrons(I read that)... However,then how to think of flowing of holes?
You are absolutely
right. In Hall effect, holes and electrons go in the same direction.
In fact, Hall effect is THE primary measurement - and nearly the only one - to tell that conduction is made by positive or negative charge carriers. The sign of the Hall voltage changes with the charge sign of the carriers, which means that all carriers deviate to the same direction. This is very uncommon outside the Hall effect.
Not willing to make things even more obscure, but... Well, it's a complicated subject anyway.
If someone imagines holes as lacks of normal electrons, he's wrong. Normal electrons would deviate to the usual direction for electrons, and then holes would deviate to the opposite direction, which is NOT experimentally observed. Holes DO deviate as positive particles do. This is because is such materials, electrons have a
negative mass hence deviate to the abnormal direction. Then, introducing the holes is really useful, because holes have a positive mass there and behave normally.
Even more: in half of all metals, conduction occurs through holes rather than electrons, which only means that the mobile electrons (the ones near the Fermi level) have a negative mass. In metals, there are so many states available to the electrons that one couldn't possibly say "nearly full, just a few vacant places called holes".
In a metal, there are huge amounts of electrons, of holes, even more available states, and we choose between electrons and holes just from the positive or negative mass of electrons, to think with a charge carrier of positive mass hence sound behaviour.