Calculating Charge Carrier Density in Materials: Formula and Table of Values

plasmabrain
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I've been trying to find a formula for calculating charge carrier density of a material, or a table of values , but can't seem to find any. If anyone knows of a link to a formula or table, any help would be welcome.

Thanks,
Plas
 
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there's no general formula since metals and semiconductors have very different properities. did you have metals or semicondutors in mind or both?
 
marlon said:
Check out formula's 18 and others of this site :

http://britneyspears.ac/physics/basics/basics.htm

marlon

ps : look at the formula's, NOT the pictures... Remain focussed...It is not easy to study physics

haha. we used that page at a solid state physics course I took.
 
inha said:
haha. we used that page at a solid state physics course I took.

same here

marlon
 
marlon said:
same here

marlon

Baby, hit me one more time.
 
I was actually wondering about graphite, ex70 in particular (1.85 g/cm2).

Basically, I'm trying to find good materials for a Hall probe project I'm working on, and I'm considering what I have laying around, but can't find values for anything I have.

Plas
 
how?

I find this
In TaN, each Ta atom contributes three electrons to the N 2p band and two electrons to the 5d conduction band, resulting in a charge carrier density n = 9.7 X 10to power 22 cm−3
how? any idea?
 
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