Condensed Matter / Physics / Quantum Mechanics / etc.

I’m With the (Valence) Band: Band Structure and the Science of Conduction

It was not so very long ago that people thought that semiconductors were part-time orchestra leaders and microchips were very, very small snack foods. ~Geraldine A. Ferraro More is different. ~Philip Warren Anderson Metals conduct electricity. Nonmetals don’t. That’s the conventional wisdom, anyway. In truth, there is a third class of material, called semiconductors. A semiconductor sometimes conducts electricity and sometimes doesn’t. This week, we’ll learn precisely what a semiconductor is and how the forces of quantum mechanics determine whether a material is a conductor, an insulator, or a semiconductor. More is Different Nobel laureate Philip Warren Anderson said

Physics / Quantum Mechanics / Science And Math

Binary Unity: The Pauli Exclusion Principle

Sameness leaves us in peace but it is contradiction that makes us productive. ~Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe In previous entries, I’ve discussed the wave nature of particles and some consequences of that wave nature, how electrons occupy specific energy states in atoms, and how particles obey the laws of probability. This is all pretty weird stuff. However, there’s another strange phenomenon in quantum mechanics that I haven’t discussed. That phenomenon is the Pauli exclusion principle. The Mystery of Stability An atom is made of protons, neutrons, and electrons. A good (but not quite right) model of the atom is