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Band Gap in Insulators |
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| Sep10-09, 04:56 PM | #1 |
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Band Gap in Insulators
Hello all, I'm just getting to grips with conduction in solids and am trying to find some values for the band gap between the valence and the conduction bands. All I can find anywhere are typical values for semiconductors (or about an eV). I also found that carbon in the diamond configuration has a band gap of 5.5eV, but I've heard elsewhere that diamond is in fact a semiconductor (I know there's a thin line between the two, but I'm unsure that this counts as an insulator). I found this value on http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu...ids/band2.html
I only ask because if 5.5eV is standard for insulators, I can't work out why they would insulate at anything much more than 5V (as this would give the electrons enough energy to move to the conduction band and therefore conduct). If possible, could you reply with where you found the information out, cause without that info, I can't be sure the answers are right. Thanks in advance! Edit: I just read (on wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulat...cal)#Breakdown so don't give it too much credit) that the breakdown voltage is indeed equal to the band gap energy. Although this makes me feel that my understanding is getting close, can I just confirm that usual band gaps are much higher (the voltage in my mains cables is at 230V, so that would imply a band gap of *at least* 230eV) |
| Sep11-09, 01:07 AM | #2 |
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The nomenclature surrounding the terms "insulator" and "semiconductor" can be a bit confusing, because it's often not used consistently. If one wanted to be really strict, one might reserve the term "semiconductor" for an insulator with a bandgap of less than, say, 10kT, or a doped semiconductor. But often times the terms are used interchangeably with materials with band gaps less than 2 eV.
5.5 eV is fairly large for an insulator. Most insulators have considerably smaller gaps, but diamond is on the larger side. A band gap of 230 eV would be outrageous. Usually breakdown for insulators is quoted in terms of the electric field, because the size of the system the voltage is applied to is relevant, and typical units are kV/mm. |
| Sep11-09, 06:56 AM | #3 |
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If I imagine a wire (which is surrounded by an insulator) at a potential of 230V, then an electron outside the insulator would like to get to the lower potential inside the wire. However, it doesn't have enough energy, so the only way it could get through is via quantum tunnelling, with a fairly tiny probability of doing so. However, that doesn't explain the breakdown of an insulator.. Is it possible to calculate this breakdown voltage per meter (or kV/mm) in any way, from basic principles? And what is the mechanism behind this breakdown? |
| Sep11-09, 10:59 AM | #4 |
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Band Gap in Insulators
Well, I don't know how to calculate it. The mechanism is tunneling. A simple picture is if you graph V(x) for the conduction and valence states. If you have an electric field, then going in one direction, the energies of those states will gradually decrease. See my crude drawing below. Eventually, if you travel far enough, the conduction states will be lowered to the point where they have the same potential as valence states further back. Then electrons can tunnel. But if that distance is very far, then the tunneling probability will be very low, and breakdown won't be observed. The larger the electric field, the steeper the slope of V(x) will be, so that will increase the probability of breakdown tunneling.
Code:
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----- conduction states
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----- valence states
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x ->
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| Sep11-09, 11:31 AM | #5 |
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| Sep11-09, 11:58 AM | #6 |
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For diamond, the breakdown field is 1000 kV/mm (source), so it would take a voltage of 5.5 eV applied across 5.5 nm (about 15 unit cells) to cause breakdown. For breakdown to happen through air, it's a bit more difficult to analyze because one it will depend on the work functions of the materials between which conduction takes place.
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