citw said:
Of course, I do know what recombination is and what carrier collisions are, but I don't know what makes the recombination rate short or long (which you and Cthugha have tried to explain to me).
I've gathered that (all else constant) a larger band gap corresponds to faster recombination time, although I'd very much like to see this explained (mathematically) in terms of the golden rule as Cthugha has described.
Returning to the original point, chill_factor mentioned that there are no radiative transitions in conductors. Is this the answer to the original question as to why we don't use conductors in optoelectronics?
Also, as to my question about absorption and emission in conductors, I'm still not grasping this completely. Without thinking in terms of plasmons, what is a simple conceptual explanation as to the difference between semiconductors and conductors with respect to emission and absorption? Assuming no knowledge of plasmons.
The electrical resistance of a semiconductor is highly sensitive to impurities. Hypothetically, a semiconductor crystal with no impurities, no light and at a low temperature is an insulator. It does not conduct electricity because it has no charge carriers. It does not absorb below band gap light because there are no empty mid gap states.
A low resistivity semiconductor is basically the same as a metal. If a semiconductor crystals contains an excess of one type of shallow-impurity, at a temperature where that shallow-impurity will thermally ionize, then the semiconductor has an excess of charge carriers. The charge carriers in this low resistivity semiconductor do form plasmons.
A high resistivity semiconductor is basically the same as an insulator. If a semiconductor crystal has no carriers, then it won't conduct electricity.
If one visually compares two semiconductors with identical crystal structure (not including the impurities), the low resistivity semiconductor will look shinier than the high resistivity semiconductor. This is something one can see with the unaided eye. The extra reflection of light is due to charge carriers which are locked together to form plasmons. The reflectivity of the low resistivity semiconductor will resemble that of a metal.
I am using the phrase charge carriers because it doesn't matter whether the excess charge carriers are valence-holes or conduction-electrons. The low resistivity semiconductor reflects light just like a metal.
The majority carriers in a low resistivity semiconductor have basically an infinite recombination time. Just like a metal. If the excess carriers in the semiconductor are conduction-electrons, then the conduction-electrons have an infinite lifetime. If the excess carriers in the semiconductor are valence-holes, then the valence-holes have an infinite lifetime.
What makes a low resistivity semiconductor different from a true metal is basically how the majority carriers were generated. A true metal has excess carriers even without impurities or light. Lead, for instance, has a low conductivity no matter what impurities you place in it. Silicon has no excess carriers unless it is grown with impurities. In a semiconductor, it is either impurities or light that provide the excess carriers.
The optical properties of a metal are largely determined by its conductivity. When you take electromagnetic theory, you will learn how to calculate reflectivity from the conductivity of the metal. The same formulas for metal work in low resistivity semiconductors. From the standpoint of electrical properties, a metal and a low resistivity semiconductor are the same thing.
The conductivity of a material is determined by the product of the carrier density and the mobility. The mobility is proportional to the time between collisions. The carrier density is determined differently in metals and semiconductors. Basically, the carrier density of semiconductors is the density of the impurities that contribute carriers. The carrier density in the true metal is basically the density of atoms times the number of free carriers in the outermost band.
Recombination time is important when it comes to photoconductivity. Photoconductivity can be important in high resistivity semiconductors. If a semiconductor crystal has no impurities, or is doped with impurities that absorb free carriers, then the carrier density will be very low. The unilluminated crystal may effectively have no free carriers. However, a small amount of light can make that crystal become a "conductor". There is no unique answer to the question, "What causes recombination." There is more than one process that can cause recombination of free carriers in a semiconductor. There are journals devoted to that sort of stuff. Band gaps are sometimes involved but not always.
I happen to be doing some research now on the recombination time in a high resistivity semiconductor. The research happens to be rather specific, not general. However, a short description may be helpful to you.
The material that I am working on is a high resistivity semiconductor crystal. The material has free carriers only under certain illumination conditions. If kept in the dark at room temperature, it can not conduct electricity. I did not know at the beginning of the research anything about the impurities in the material. In fact, I was told that the crystal was "absolutely pure". The other students called it "intrinsic material". Their logic was that a high resistivity semiconductor must be pure. My research showed not only that it wasn't pure, but the acceptor destroyed the free carriers made by other impurities.
I did not know the mechanism of recombination when I started the research. However, my research has revealed that the recombination lifetime is determined by the concentration of acceptor.
In the dark, it has no free carriers. Exposed to bright light, it has lots of impurities. In the specific situation that I am working on, the recombination time is determined by impurities.
The semiconductor crystal that I am working on is "compensated". It has a nearly equal amount of shallow-donors and shallow-acceptors. Therefore, the conduction-electrons and the valence-holes annihilate each other. A few deep-level impurities are present which destroy any free-carriers caused by the small imbalance between donors and acceptors. Because the unilluminated material has no free-carriers, the unilluminated material is an insulator.
When I write the article, I will refer to it as semi-insulating. This way, new students won't have to ask me whether it has semi-conductivity. The semiconductor is acting like an insulator because that is how the impurities in it were added.
What I am finding is that the recombination time of the free carriers is determined by the shallow-acceptor concentration. The acceptor is a recombination center. When the crystal is illuminated, an equal amount of conduction-electrons and valence-holes are generated. Supposedly, the conductivity should go down though I am using other measurements to detect these carriers.
I didn't know that to begin with. I initially thought that the recombination time was determined by something called an "exciton". An exciton is a conduction-electron in orbit around a valence-hole. The exciton doesn't require any impurities. I thought that the lifetimes I was measuring were determined by some property of the exciton. Maybe in some other semiconductor under different conditions, the exciton does determine the lifetime! There are many things that can affect recombination time. Excitons are sometimes important and sometimes not.
The acceptor first captures a conduction-electron, then it captures a valence-hole, and then it forces then to combine. A photon is given off (which I am detecting). However, the rate at which these carriers are destroyed is determined by the concentration of acceptors.
Note that the band gap does not uniquely determine the recombination time of the material. The recombination time in this material is highly sensitive to what impurities are in the crystal. There are apparently a large number of different types of impurity in the crystal. However, I managed to determined that the acceptor (which may itself be a mixture) mostly determines the recombination time of the carriers.
I think what I am trying to say is that you can't ignore the impurities. You can't determine the properties of a semiconductor from the band gap alone.
In any case, the extra reflectivity in metals and low resistivity semiconductors is caused by plasmons. The carriers in these materials move in unison under low frequency light. The carriers absorb high frequency light. High frequency light causes the plasmons to break up.