Dictionary of Chemistry [6th Ed.]

(Brent) #1

of allowed quantum states. Between
the bands are forbidden bands. The
outermost electrons of the atoms (i.e.
the ones responsible for chemical
bonding) form the valence band of
the solid. This is the band, of those
occupied, that has the highest en-
ergy.
The band structure of solids ac-
counts for their electrical properties.
In order to move through the solid,
the electrons have to change from
one quantum state to another. This
can only occur if there are empty
quantum states with the same en-
ergy. In general, if the valence band
is full, electrons cannot change to
new quantum states in the same
band. For conduction to occur, the
electrons have to be in an unÜlled
band – the conduction band. Metals
are good conductors either because
the valence band and the conduction
band are only half-Ülled or because
the conduction band overlaps with
the valence band; in either case va-
cant states are available. In insulators
the conduction band and valence
band are separated by a wide forbid-
den band and electrons do not have
enough energy to ‘jump’ from one to
the other. In intrinsic semiconduc-
tors the forbidden gap is narrow and,
at normal temperatures, electrons at


the top of the valence band can move
by thermal agitation into the conduc-
tion band (at absolute zero, a semi-
conductor would act as an insulator).
Doped semiconductors have extra
bands in the forbidden gap. See illus-
tration.

energy levelA deÜniteÜxed en-
ergy that a molecule, atom, electron,
or nucleus can have. In an atom, for
example, the atom has aÜxed energy
corresponding to the *orbitals in
which its electrons move around the
nucleus. The atom can accept a quan-
tum of energy to become an excited
atom (see excitation) if that extra en-
ergy will raise an electron to a per-
mitted orbital. Between the ground
state, which is the lowest possible
energy level for a particular system,
and theÜrst excited state there are
no permissible energy levels. Accord-
ing to the *quantum theory, only
certain energy levels are possible. An
atom passes from one energy level to
the next without passing through
fractions of that energy transition.
These levels are usually described by
the energies associated with the indi-
vidual electrons in the atoms, which
are always lower than an arbitrary
level for a free electron. The energy
levels of molecules also involve quan-

205 energy level


e


EEE

electron
distribution

forbidden band

conduction
band

valence
band

conduction
band

valence
band

valence band

conduction band

Insulator Conductor Semiconductor

Energy bands

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