Semiconductors are unique materials vital to modern electronics, classified primarily as intrinsic (pure) or extrinsic (doped), each with distinct properties and applications.

Intrinsic Semiconductors

  • These are chemically pure semiconductors with no intentional impurity added.
  • The number of electrons is equal to the number of holes, meaning the concentration of charge carriers is balanced.
  • Their electrical conductivity is relatively low and highly dependent on temperature—more carriers are generated as temperature rises.
  • Examples: Silicon (Si), Germanium (Ge).

Extrinsic Semiconductors

  • Produced by adding specific impurities (doping) to intrinsic semiconductors to enhance conductivity.
  • The doping process introduces a dominant carrier: electrons (n-type) or holes (p-type).
  • N-type: Doped with pentavalent atoms (5 valence electrons), resulting in more electrons.
  • P-type: Doped with trivalent atoms (3 valence electrons), resulting in more holes.
  • The number of electrons and holes is unequal, determined by the type of doping.
  • These semiconductors offer much higher electrical conductivity and are essential in devices like diodes and transistors.

Key Differences Table

FeatureIntrinsic SemiconductorExtrinsic Semiconductor
PurityPure, undopedIntentionally doped
Carrier ConcentrationElectrons ≈ HolesElectrons ≠ Holes (depends on doping)
ConductivityLow, temperature-dependentHigh, enhanced by doping
TypesSingle (Si, Ge, etc.)N-type or P-type (based on dopant)
ExampleSilicon, GermaniumSi: P-type (Boron), N-type (Phosphorus)

Intrinsic semiconductors are the basis, but extrinsic semiconductors are tailored for practical electronic tasks, making them foundational in nearly all modern electronic devices.