Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

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Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconducto rs !!
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Transcript of Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Page 1: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Welcome to Physics 5335:

The Physics of

Semiconductors!!

Page 2: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Class Web Page!http://www.phys.ttu.edu/~cmyles/Phys5335/5335.html

Parts of this page are UNDER CONSTRUCTION!

There you will find:

1. Posted (Word format): Syllabus, Help Resources, Semiconductor Resources, Exams & Homework (eventually with solutions).

2. Posted (Power Point format): Lectures

3. Important Class Announcements & Calendar Items!

4. Links to Web Pages for semiconductor physics

5. Other important items relating to this class.

PLEASE!!Get into the habit of checking this page often!

Page 3: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Announcement Page!My Web Page

• Linked from the class Web Page is:The Announcement Page:http://www.phys.ttu.edu/~cmyles/Phys5335/announce.html– Contains class announcements & major calendar

items. Please check it often!

• You might also check out My Web page at:

http://www.phys.ttu.edu/~cmyles/

Page 4: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Physics 5335• Email Distribution List!

– It is VERY important that you have an email address & that I have it!!!

– I will use the email distribution list to make important class announcements!!!

– It is VERY important that you check your email DAILY!!! (PLEASE tell me if you change email address!)

Page 5: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Assignment Number 1

For 20 extra points towards

your homework grade!!• Send me an email message:

– Be sure to include your name & Physics 5335 in the message.

– Email address: [email protected]

Due 5PM

Friday, August 31, 2012!!!

Page 6: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Homework = 40% of GradeHomework will be assigned regularly!!

• It may come from our text or elsewhere.

• Working problems is the most effective means of learning physics.

Homework is due at 5PM on the due date.

NO late homework will be accepted You are strongly encouraged to work on homework, in

groups together! This is how most scientists &

engineers work in the “real” world!

Page 7: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Mid Term Exam = 30% of Grade

It Will be a Take Home Exam:

BUT– It will have mostly qualitative questions

that must be answered using words, not math. The idea of this is to assess your understanding of physical concepts.

– Your understanding of the needed math skills will be assessed with the Homework.

Page 8: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Semester Project = 30% of Grade(instead of a Final Exam!)

Oral Presentation + Written Paper• Library Research on an advanced topic or

application of semiconductor physics we don’t have time for in class. Choose the topic by Mid-Semester (Monday, Oct. 22)

Have the topic approved by me before starting.

Oral Presentations Will be scheduled during final exam period (Dec. 10 - 15)

Written Paper

Will also be due at that time.

Page 9: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Where to Go for Help?? Your Fellow Students!!!

• A very effective strategy is to work on homework and to study together in a group.

• This is how professionals work in the “real world”.

Me (office hours or not!)

The Internet!!! • There are LARGE numbers of Semiconductor Physics websites!

Using Google.com & typing in “Semiconductor Physics” gives millions of hits!!!!

Class Web Page!

Page 10: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

To Succeed in this Course • READ the book, which cost you many $$$!

It’s most effective to read the material BEFORE I lecture on it.

• READ some of the supplementary books or other resources to give you different treatments of the material.

• WORK the assigned homework problems!!– It is IMPOSSIBLE to learn physics without

working problems!!! – Copying other people’s solutions or solutions from

the web will NOT teach you physics!

Page 11: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

COME TO CLASS!!• There is a correlation between attendance & grade! Also,

skipping means that you are WASTING the tuition & fees that you (or someone) paid! With tuition & fees for a full-time student, each class meeting costs about $25. Each time you skip, you are throwing away $25!! After a while this adds up! My lectures may not be entertaining or brilliant, but I do expose you to the material.

ATTENDANCE!!!THE WEEKEND DOESN’T BEGIN

THURSDAY, which is a regular CLASS DAY!!!!

To Succeed in this Course

Page 12: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

BooksPrimary Textbook

Semiconductor Physics & Applications

by M. Balkansi & R.F. Wallis.– Portions of lectures will be from it, but also from the 2

supplements. Topics will be discussed in approximately the same order as the table of contents.

– Material from many other sources will also be used.– It's available at bookstores (?), on-line, in hardbound or

paperback. I urge you to shop around & find the best price.

Supplemental TextbooksOptional. Some portions of the course will use some information in them.

1. Fundamentals of Semiconductors, by P.Y. Yu & M. Cardona.

2. Semiconductor Physics, by K. Seeger.

Page 13: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Course ObjectiveTo expose students to the rich, broad, varied field of

SEMICONDUCTOR PHYSICS. • This ISN'T a semiconductor device course, but a course on the

microscopic material properties of semiconductor materials!!

• A semiconductor device course is Physics 5336, Device Physics.

• This course is designed to complement & supplement Physics 5304, Solid State Physics (offered Fall in odd numbered years).

Obviously, there is large overlap between Solid State & Semiconductors, but one course should NOT be considered a replacement for the other!!

• We'll discuss the microscopic physics of mostly, CRYSTALLINE semiconductors.

• It would help if you already knew some basic solid state physics, but it isn’t vital!

Page 14: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

What is Semiconductor Physics?• “Semiconductor Physics” can be defined as study of the materials that

are important for modern technology. As we'll see, the physics of semiconductor materials is really much more than that! It is a very important branch of the broader discipline of “Solid State Physics”, which is study of the microscopic properties of the dense assembly of

electrons formed by placing atoms very close together in a solid. Solid State is very large, very broad physics sub-field.

• In some sense, Solid State Physics is “the opposite” of Particle Physics.

• Particle Physics focuses on properties of INDIVIDUAL particles.– Particle physicists break objects up into their constituent building blocks .

• Solid State Physics deals with the microscopic properties of Large COLLECTIONS of particles.– Solid State physicists are interested in what fundamentally NEW

PROPERTIES emerge when these building blocks are grouped together in various ways.

Page 15: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Motivations for the Study of Semiconductor Physics • Technological & Basic Physics motivations to study Semiconductor Physics.

Technological Motivations• A very important motivation is that the microscopic properties Semiconductor

Physics deals with are responsible for the majority of modern technology.

– These properties determine the mechanical strength of materials, how they interact with light, how they conduct electricity, etc.

– So, Semiconductor Physics is important for technology, because it gives guidance on the design the circuits needed for modern electronic devices.

This field gave us the transistor

& the semiconductor chip!– So, Semiconductor Physics is traditionally linked to materials science,

chemistry & engineering.

– Recently, it has developed overlaps with biology, biochemistry, biotechnology & medicine.

– So, many current research questions in Semiconductor Physics are still at the frontiers of applied science & next-generation technologies.

Page 16: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

Basic Physics Motivations• A very important motivation to study

Semiconductor Physics is that the fundamental physics needed to understand the microscopic properties of these materials is very interesting.– To understand these properties, the ideas & methods of quantum

mechanics must be used. The physics of solids is

VERY deeply quantum mechanical.– So, Semiconductor Physics has sometimes been called the best

“lab” for studying subtle quantum mechanical effects.

– This course may be a first chance for students to see quantum mechanical ideas & methods applied to cases where their technological consequences are so important.

Page 17: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

• Just 2 examples (of MANY!) in which Semiconductor Physics discoveries have revealed very interesting, fundamental physics are observations/explanations of

1. The Quantum Hall Effect

2. The Fractional Quantum Hall Effect• Both have exotic quantum mechanical explanations.• A strong indicator that Semiconductor Physics has led (&

continues to lead!) to the understanding of many very interesting basic physics phenomena is the fact that:

More than 40% of Physics Nobel Prizes in the

past 40 years & 50% of those in the past 12 years

have been for work in Semiconductor Physics

Page 18: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

The Semiconductor Physics Research Area • Many of you are likely taking this course because it is related to

your research area. You've chosen a very good, interesting field! LARGE quantities of new physics is discovered in this area (& in its “parent field” of Solid State) all of the time.

• For example, the American Physical Society's (APS) Division of Condensed Matter Physics or DCMP ("Condensed Matter" is ~ the same as “Solid State”) is, BY FAR, the largest APS division!

~(1/3) of the ~ 50,000 APS members belong to DCMP.• Another APS division is the Division of Materials Physics or DMP

(“Materials Physics” is ~ the same as “Applied Solid State”), started 12-15 years ago. The DMP is rapidly growing & may eventually become similar in size to the DCMP. (Many people belong to both!).

• BY FAR, the largest annual APS meeting is the joint DCMP & DMP meeting. It is held each March (it's called the “March Meeting” !).

• 2012 March Meeting (Boston, MA): ~7,000+ people & ~5,000+ papers!

Page 19: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

The American Physical Society (APS)No matter what their research area

Every Physics Graduate Student, + every undergrad who wants to go to graduate school

should join the APS!!The first year's membership is FREE to students & the following student years are

highly discounted!

Page 20: Welcome to Physics 5335: The Physics of Semiconductors!!

The Materials Research Society (MRS)

Graduate students working in Solid State, Condensed Matter, or Materials Physics

should also consider joining the MRS!!• The MRS is another large professional

organization, but it has a very interdisciplinary membership. This reflects the fact that people with many different backgrounds are doing various kinds of materials research. For example, it has members with backgrounds in Physics, in Chemistry, & in various types of Engineering.