pyctz
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why do electric field is zero out side of depletion region?
can you explain it with using of coulomb rule?mfb said:In an area with charge carriers, how could there be a permanent electric field without current flow?
in depletion layer there are uncovered charges that generate electric field , how cancel their field?mfb said:This is simple U=RI with negligible I and finite R. The Coulomb rule is not useful here.
the remaining atom don't generate any fied, then who cancel the field of depletion layer?mfb said:The remaining atoms have a charge as well. There is nothing "uncovered". A doped semiconductor has free charges of one type with zero overall charge density. If you remove those free charges the volume gets charged.
Sure they do.pyctz said:the remaining atom don't generate any fied
if for each atom the overall charge is zero, then they don't generate any fied.mfb said:Sure they do.
Replace a silicon atom with boron. It has one electron and one proton less, so the overall charge is zero .
but who cancel the field of depletion layer?mfb said:And that's exactly what you have outside the depletion region.
it is not correct,mfb said:The other half of the depletion layer.
sheets of uniform charge must have infinite dimension(infinite plane) to lead uniform fieldsmfb said:Distance does not matter in a one-dimensional problem. Sheets of uniform charge density lead to uniform fields in all space (outside those sheets).
i don't talk about approximationmfb said:Compare the typical thickness of a depletion region with the typical dimension of a semiconductor device.
The infinite sheet is a good approximation unless you consider modern microprocessors, and then things are much more complicated anyway.
actually, in non ideal diode electric field is zero outside of depletion region.mfb said:Your statement in post 1 is an approximation.
Actually, every description you will ever see is an approximation. Just the quality is different.
inside a conductor The electric field is exactly zeromfb said:- The electric field is never exactly zero anywhere.
- Charge distribution is never exactly uniform in space
- the depletion layer does not have an exact boundary
- ...
All approximations.
if The electric field is not zero the free charges move until it becomes zeromfb said:Not exactly.
As I said, those statements are all approximations.
In the real world, physics is never exact.
if The electric field is not zero the free charges move until it becomes zeromfb said:Not exactly.
As I said, those statements are all approximations.
In the real world, physics is never exact.