Energy Band Theory

1. Introduction

Energy Band Theory is one of the most important theories in solid-state physics. It explains how electrons behave inside solids, especially conductors, semiconductors, and insulators. This theory helps us understand why some materials conduct electricity easily, some conduct only under certain conditions, and some do not conduct at all.

Modern electronic devices such as transistors, diodes, integrated circuits, solar cells, and LEDs are all based on Energy Band Theory. Without this theory, modern electronics would not exist.

2. Basic Idea of Energy Levels

Energy

Energy is the ability to do work. In atoms, electrons have fixed amounts of energy called energy levels.

Electron

An electron is a negatively charged subatomic particle that moves around the nucleus of an atom.

In an isolated atom, electrons can occupy only discrete (separate) energy levels. These are called atomic energy levels.


3. Formation of Energy Bands in Solids

Solid


A solid is formed when a large number of atoms come very close to each other.

When atoms are far apart, their electrons remain in individual atomic energy levels.
But when atoms come very close (as in solids), the outer electrons interact with neighboring atoms.

Because of this interaction:

  • Each atomic energy level splits into many closely spaced levels
  • These closely spaced levels form energy bands

Energy Band


An energy band is a continuous range of allowed energy values for electrons in a solid.


4. Important Energy Bands

There are three main energy regions in a solid:


(a) Valence Band

Valence Band

  • It is the highest occupied energy band
  • It contains valence electrons
  • These electrons are involved in bonding
  • At absolute zero temperature, this band is completely filled

(b) Conduction Band

Conduction Band

  • It is the energy band above the valence band
  • Electrons in this band are free to move
  • These electrons are responsible for electric current

(c) Forbidden Energy Gap (Band Gap)

Forbidden Energy Gap

  • The energy gap between the valence band and conduction band
  • No electron can exist in this region
  • Also called band gap

5. Band Gap and Electrical Conductivity

The size of the band gap determines whether a material is a conductor, semiconductor, or insulator.


6. Conductors

Conductor

)

Examples: Copper, Silver, Aluminum

Characteristics:

  • Valence band and conduction band overlap
  • Band gap is zero
  • Electrons move freely
  • Very high electrical conductivity

Because there is no forbidden gap, electrons easily move to higher energy states when an electric field is applied.


7. Insulators

Insulator

Examples: Rubber, Glass, Wood

Characteristics:

  • Very large band gap (more than 5 eV)
  • Valence band is completely full
  • Conduction band is empty
  • Electrons cannot jump to conduction band easily

As a result, insulators do not conduct electricity under normal conditions.


8. Semiconductors

Semiconductor

Examples: Silicon, Germanium

Characteristics:

  • Moderate band gap (about 1 eV)
  • At absolute zero, behaves like an insulator
  • At room temperature, some electrons gain energy and jump to conduction band
  • Conductivity increases with temperature

This special behavior makes semiconductors extremely useful in electronics.


9. Intrinsic Semiconductors

Intrinsic Semiconductor

  • Pure semiconductor
  • No impurity added
  • Number of electrons = number of holes

Hole


A hole is the absence of an electron in the valence band and behaves like a positive charge.


10. Extrinsic Semiconductors (Doping)

Doping

(Pronunciation: DOH-ping)

Doping is the process of adding a small amount of impurity to a pure semiconductor to increase conductivity.


(a) n-type Semiconductor

  • Doped with pentavalent impurity
  • Extra electrons are added
  • Electrons are majority carriers

(b) p-type Semiconductor

  • Doped with trivalent impurity
  • Holes are majority carriers
  • Conductivity due to holes

11. Effect of Temperature

When temperature increases:

  • Electrons gain thermal energy
  • More electrons move to conduction band
  • Conductivity of semiconductors increases

This is opposite to metals.


12. Fermi Level

Fermi Level

The Fermi level is the energy level at which the probability of finding an electron is 50%.

  • In conductors: lies inside conduction band
  • In semiconductors: lies near middle of band gap
  • In insulators: lies deep in the band gap

13. Importance of Energy Band Theory

Energy Band Theory explains:

  1. Electrical conductivity of solids
  2. Difference between conductors, semiconductors, and insulators
  3. Working of diodes and transistors
  4. Temperature dependence of resistance
  5. Optical properties of solids

14. Applications

  • Transistors
  • Diodes
  • Integrated circuits
  • Solar cells
  • LEDs
  • Computers and mobile phones

15. Conclusion

Energy Band Theory is a fundamental concept in modern physics and electronics. It explains the behavior of electrons in solids using energy bands instead of individual energy levels. By understanding this theory, we can easily explain the electrical properties of materials and the working of all modern electronic devices.

ABS Gautam
Author: ABS Gautam

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