cmos said:
This is partly incorrect. First off, an electric potential difference (i.e. voltage) implies an energy difference (energy is directly proportional to electric potential). However, when one speak of currents, it is customary to speak of electric potentials as opposed to energies.
More importantly, your description of light incident on a photodiode is correct up to the point where photons elevate an electron into the conduction band. It is customary to say that you are creating excess minority carriers on either side of the junction. These minority carriers, however, are then swept to the opposite side of the junction by the built-in potential of the junction. So, as you see, it is still a voltage that drives the current.
Your mention of the LED seems to add nothing to the conversation and implies an effort to confuse and draw attention away from the topic at hand.
In reading these last few post, it seems as if you come up with complicated scenarios that are highly convoluted in their explanation. You then go on to mention "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies." Great.
Can you come up with ONE example where current is the ultimate driver? Don't get cute, don't confound the problem. Just present one example where current is the ultimate driver.
I never said that current is the ultimate driver. I said that I and V are both driven by energy, or work W. Do you read my posts at all?
Regarding photodiodes, did you ever take and pass a course on semiconductor physics? I took a senior undergrad course from the physics dept, then a grad level course from the EE dept in the latter '70's. Then I took 2 more in 2007-2008 in grad school. You just blind sided me with your theory:
"It is customary to say that you are creating excess minority carriers on either side of the junction. These minority carriers, however, are then swept to the opposite side of the junction by the built-in potential of the junction. So, as you see, it is still a voltage that drives the current."
How can a minority carrier be swept by the built in potential? The built-in potential, herein referred to as Vbi, is a barrier that must be overcome. It doesn't drive carriers anywhere. Recheck your references. In order to change the potential across a junction, the charge distribution must change, i.e. carriers must be increased or decreased. So if charges are increased or decreased, current takes place. The change in current chronologically preceded the change in voltage. The junction voltage does not drive the current, NOR VICE-VERSA. The Vbi is due to minority carrier distribution. Thermally generated hole-electron pairs transit across the junction. When they arrive in the new material, they are minorities, holes in the n material, and electrons in the p material. When new e-h pairs are generated, they cannot be swept across the barrier by Vbi. Vbi consists of the same polarity carriers as the new carriers. I.E. the holes in the n material cannot sweep holes from the p side over to the n side. Like charges repel not attact. Vbi must be overcome. An external source must provide an E field to move the carriers across the barries. This E field must overcome the Vbi since Vbi tends to oppose the migration of carriers. Vbi OPPOSES charge being "swept" across the barrier. Vbi does NO SWEEPING! Take any p-n junction. The barrier Vbi is due to holes in the n side, and electrons in the p side. To move holes from p to n, and electrons from n to p, an E field is needed. This E field points from the p to the n side. But the E field associated with Vbi points from the n to the p side, exactly OPPOSITE that needed.
Regarding an example where current is the ultimate driver, take a lossless inductor shorted. It carriers an non-zero current I, and has inductance L. A switch across it keeps current steady. A cap is placed across the switch. It is uncharged. The energy in the inductor is L*(I^2)/2, and in the cap it is 0.
If the switch is opened, current from the inductor enters the cap and charges it. After the inductor is completely emptied, the cap energy is C*(V^2)/2, and inductor has 0 energy. Then the cap transfers energy back to the inductor, etc. etc.
The reason that the cap was charged, and that the voltage went from non-zero to zero is due to the inductor transferring energy. This energy is in the form of a magnetic field / current. Of course, the instant the switch opened, the inductor began generating an increasing voltage. But at t = 0, V = 0, with non-zero I. Hence the cap voltage is 0 with current entering it. As current charges the cap its voltage increases. Likewise, the cap voltage maxes out, then returns energy to the inductor. The voltage in non-zero while the current is 0.
Thus the current can charge the cap and change the voltage, and the voltage can energize the inductor and change its current. Either I or V can come first. It is energy that is the ultimate driver. If an observer arrives after the switch has been opened, they see the energy bouncing back and forth. If asked, "Which came first, the I or the V?", they couldn't answer. Either can "come first".
This is well known. "Eli the ice man" has been known for nearly 2 centuries. The notion that "voltage drives current" is just a misconception easily acquired since batteries, generators, and electronic power supplies are almost always designed, optimized, and built for *constant-voltage* mode of operation. We can easily lose sight of the fact that the constant voltage and variable current mode of operation is a man-made thing. Mother Nature is neither constant I nor constant V. I hope this explains my position. If anything needs clarified, I'll be glad to do so. Comments are always welcome and appreciated. BR.
Claude