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  2. Space charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_charge

    Space charge is an inherent property of all vacuum tubes. This has at times made life harder or easier for electrical engineers who used tubes in their designs. For example, space charge significantly limited the practical application of triode amplifiers which led to further innovations such as the vacuum tube tetrode.

  3. Depletion region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depletion_region

    In semiconductor physics, the depletion region, also called depletion layer, depletion zone, junction region, space charge region, or space charge layer, is an insulating region within a conductive, doped semiconductor material where the mobile charge carriers have diffused away, or been forced away by an electric field. The only elements left ...

  4. James M. Early - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_M._Early

    The Early effect in bipolar junction transistors is named after Jim Early, who first characterized it and published a paper on it in 1952. [1] The Early effect in bipolar junction transistors is due to an effective decrease in the base width because of the widening of the base-collector depletion region, resulting in an increase in the ...

  5. Theory of solar cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_solar_cells

    In thick solar cells there is very little electric field in the active region outside the space charge zone, so the dominant mode of charge carrier separation is diffusion. In these cells the diffusion length of minority carriers (the length that photo-generated carriers can travel before they recombine) must be large compared to the cell ...

  6. Maxwell–Wagner–Sillars polarization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxwell–Wagner–Sillars...

    In dielectric spectroscopy, large frequency dependent contributions to the dielectric response, especially at low frequencies, may come from build-ups of charge.This Maxwell–Wagner–Sillars polarization (or often just Maxwell–Wagner polarization), occurs either at inner dielectric boundary layers on a mesoscopic scale, or at the external electrode-sample interface on a macroscopic scale.

  7. Double layer (plasma physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_layer_(plasma_physics)

    A double layer is a structure in a plasma consisting of two parallel layers of opposite electrical charge. The sheets of charge, which are not necessarily planar, produce localised excursions of electric potential, resulting in a relatively strong electric field between the layers and weaker but more extensive compensating fields outside, which restore the global potential. [1]

  8. Electric-field screening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric-field_screening

    In solid-state physics, especially for metals and semiconductors, the screening effect describes the electrostatic field and Coulomb potential of an ion inside the solid. Like the electric field of the nucleus is reduced inside an atom or ion due to the shielding effect , the electric fields of ions in conducting solids are further reduced by ...

  9. Double layer (surface science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_layer_(surface_science)

    The first layer, the surface charge (either positive or negative), consists of ions which are adsorbed onto the object due to chemical interactions. The second layer is composed of ions attracted to the surface charge via the Coulomb force, electrically screening the first layer. This second layer is loosely associated with the object.