Gokul43201 said:
I'll read this again, in less of a hurry, but I think I see the source of the cross-talk. I thought you were concurring with anto (and hence refuting me) on question 2, that there will be a voltage measured by probing near the depletion region.
Well, as this is practically impossible, it all depends on what one ideally defines as measurement I guess.
I fully agree that there is an *electrostatic* potential difference across the depletion layer (in other words, there is a non-zero electric field). But now, the question is: how is one going to *measure* this potential difference ? And I answered this from the point of view of a classical voltmeter with two contacts, which you have to put somewhere in contact with the "thing" you're going to measure. I based myself on two hypotheses: that a standard voltmeter is going to measure a (eventually tiny) displacement of charges, and that the two contact pins are made of identical material, and that we are going to look at charge displacement in equilibrium. I then tried to point out that all charge displacement is finally ruled by the electrochemical potential of the charge carrier that is supposed to displace, and that in any equilibrium situation, this electrochemical potential is constant. So it is not possible, with a standard volt meter, to measure anything else but 0V in an equilibrium situation.
So I concur with you that *no matter how you connect your voltmeter to a part of a PN junction*, you will always read 0V on your voltmeter.
One can interpret that in 2 ways. One can say that a classical voltmeter measures not electrostatic potential, but electrochemical potential. And the electrochemical potential is constant across the PN junction, so it is normal that one reads 0.
Or, one can say, that the classical voltmeter measures the electrostatic potential ON ITS PINS. Both statements are equivalent, because the pins are made out of the same material, so there's just a constant difference between the electrochemical potential and the electrostatic potential *in the pins*. However, this implies that one has to take into account any electric field that will be created by charge movements between the pin material and the material under test, which will be responsible for an extra electrostatic potential difference between the electrostatic potential of the pin, and the one of the material under test.
So, it is somehow simpler to say that you measure simply electrochemical potential with a voltmeter. And then it is obvious that, no matter how you're going to plug your pins onto a PN junction, you'll always find 0 V.
Now, I've been thinking about the following situation, and I have to say I'm not sure about the answer:
imagine that we drill a small hole through the entire PN junction, and we drop an electron into the hole. Will it accelerate or not when moving through the hole ? It would only see the electrostatic field, so I'd be inclined to say that you would see the electron accelerate across the hole. But then I'm not clear about any charges building up along the wall of the drilled hole, which might compensate...