The specific properties of a semiconductor depend on the
impurities, or dopants, added to it. An N-type semiconductor carries current mainly in the form of
negatively-charged electrons,
in a manner similar to the conduction of current in a wire. A P-type
semiconductor carries current predominantly as electron deficiencies called holes. A hole has a positive electric charge, equal and opposite to the charge on an electron. In
a semiconductor material, the flow of holes occurs in a direction opposite
to the flow of electrons.
A semiconductor device can perform the function of a vacuum tube having hundreds of times its volume. A single integrated circuit (IC), such as a microprocessor chip, can do the work of a set of vacuum tubes that would fill a large building and require its own electric generating plant.
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