nickhobbs
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I was wondering what the difference was between the valence band and fermi level? How do we distinguish between the two?
Thanks in advance.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks for your response.phyzguy said:They are very different things. The valence band is the energy below which there are available states for electrons to occupy. Similarly the conduction band is the energy above which there are available states. Between these two is the energy gap, where there are no (or very few) available states. The Fermi level is the energy at which the probability of a state being occupied is 1/2. In the diagram below, for example, [itex]E_V[/itex] is the valence band, [itex]E_C[/itex] is the conduction band, and [itex]E_F[/itex] is the Fermi level.
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That makes sense. Thanks very much.phyzguy said:At zero temperature all of the states below Ef will be filled and all the states above Ef will be empty. So in a metal for example, where Ef lies within a region where there are states to occupy, what your instructor said would be true. But typically Ef in a semiconductor lies within the band gap where there are no available states. So I don't think it is true to say it represents the topmost filled state. At non-zero temperature, I think the best definition is what I said. It is the energy at which the probability of a state being occupied is 1/2.