A diode is the simplest
possible semiconductor device. A diode allows current to flow
in one direction but not the other. You may have seen turnstiles
at a stadium or a subway station that let people go through
in only one direction. A diode is a one-way turnstile for
electrons.
When you put N-type and P-type silicon together as shown
in this diagram, you get a very interesting phenomenon that
gives a diode its unique properties.

Even though N-type silicon by itself is a conductor, and
P-type silicon by itself is also a conductor, the combination
shown in the diagram does not conduct any electricity. The
negative electrons in the N-type silicon get attracted to
the positive terminal of the battery. The positive holes in
the P-type silicon get attracted to the negative terminal
of the battery. No current flows across the junction because
the holes and the electrons are each moving in the wrong direction.
If you flip the battery around, the diode
conducts electricity just fine. The free electrons in the
N-type silicon are repelled by the negative terminal of the
battery. The holes in the P-type silicon are repelled by the
positive terminal. At the junction between
the N-type and P-type silicon, holes and free electrons meet.
The electrons fill the holes. Those holes and free electrons
cease to exist, and new holes and electrons spring up to take
their place. The effect is that current flows
through the junction.
A device that blocks current in one direction while letting
current flow in another direction is called a diode.
Diodes can be used in a number of ways. For example, a device
that uses batteries often contains a diode that protects the
device if you insert the batteries backward. The diode simply
blocks any current from leaving the battery if it is reversed
-- this protects the sensitive electronics in the device.
A semiconductor diode's behavior is not perfect, as shown
in this graph:

When reverse-biased, an ideal diode would
block all current. A real diode lets perhaps 10 microamps
through -- not a lot, but still not perfect. And if you apply
enough reverse voltage (V), the junction breaks down and lets
current through. Usually, the breakdown voltage is a lot more
voltage than the circuit will ever see, so it is irrelevant.
When forward-biased, there is a small amount
of voltage necessary to get the diode going. In silicon, this
voltage is about 0.7 volts. This voltage is needed to start
the hole-electron combination process at the junction.
Transistors and Chips
A transistor is created by using three
layers rather than the two layers used in a diode.
You can create either an NPN or a PNP sandwich. A transistor
can act as a switch or an amplifier.
A transistor looks like two diodes back-to-back. You'd imagine
that no current could flow through a transistor because back-to-back
diodes would block current both ways. And this is true. However,
when you apply a small current to the center layer
of the sandwich, a much larger current can flow through the
sandwich as a whole. This gives a transistor its switching
behavior. A small current can turn a larger current on and
off.
A silicon chip is a piece of silicon that
can hold thousands of transistors. With transistors acting
as switches, you can create Boolean gates, and with Boolean
gates you can create microprocessor chips.
The natural progression from silicon to doped silicon to
transistors to chips is what has made microprocessors and
other electronic devices so inexpensive and ubiquitous in
today's society. The fundamental principles are surprisingly
simple. The miracle is the constant refinement of those principles
to the point where, today, tens of millions of transistors
can be inexpensively formed onto a single chip.
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