Question
Question: Select one donor impurity among the following: Boron (B), Aluminium (Al), and Arsenic (As)....
Select one donor impurity among the following: Boron (B), Aluminium (Al), and Arsenic (As).
Solution
Pentavalent elements can donate one electron to the doped material. So, these group V elements are called donor impurity. Here, the elements having 5 valence electrons in its outermost shell will be the donor impurity among the given elements.
Complete solution:
A dopant that has 5 electrons in its valence shell, when doped with a semiconductor to increase its conductivity, is called donor impurity. This is also called pentavalent impurity for having 5 electrons in the outermost shell. It can donate the extra electron present in its valence shell to the neighboring atom.
A dopant which has 3 electrons in its valence shell, when doped with a semiconductor to raise its conductivity, is called acceptor impurity. This is also called trivalent impurity for having 3 electrons in the outermost shell. It can accept one electron from a neighboring atom as it has a vacancy of the electron.
Here, Boron (B) and Aluminium (Al) are the group III elements and have 3 electrons in the valence shell. So, they are acceptor impurities.
But, Arsenic (As) is the group V element and has 5 electrons in the valence shell. So, Arsenic (As) is the donor impurity.
Additional information:
Both the p-type and n-type crystals, formed by doping acceptor and donor impurities, respectively, are electrically neutral.
Note: By doping donor impurities in the crystal of an intrinsic semiconductor in a controlled manner, an n-type semiconductor is formed, with electrons as majority carriers. And acceptor impurities are doped in the crystal of an intrinsic semiconductor in a controlled manner to form a p-type semiconductor, with holes as the majority carriers.