(Redirected from Electron-hole pair)In the
solid state physics of
semiconductors, 'carrier generation' and 'recombination' are processes by which mobile
electrons and
electron holes are created and eliminated. Carrier generation and recombination processes are fundamental to the operation of many
optoelectronic semiconductor devices, such as
photodiodes,
LEDs and
laser diodes. They are also critical to a full analysis of
p-n junction devices such as
bipolar junction transistors and p-n junction
diodes.
The '''electron–hole pair''' is the fundamental unit of generation and recombination, corresponding to an electron transitioning between the valence band and the conduction band.
Band structure
Like other solids, semiconductor materials have '
electronic band structure' determined by the crystal properties of the material. The actual energy distribution among the electrons is described by the
Fermi energy and the
temperature of the electrons. At
absolute zero temperature, all of the electrons have energy below the Fermi energy; but at non-zero temperatures the energy levels are randomized and some electrons have energy above the Fermi level.

Electronic band structure of a semiconductor material.
In semiconductors the Fermi energy lies in the middle of a ''forbidden band'' or
band gap between two ''allowed bands'' called the ''
valence band'' and the ''
conduction band''. The valence band, immediately below the forbidden band, is normally very nearly completely occupied. The conduction band, above the Fermi level, is normally nearly completely empty. Because the valence band is so nearly full, its electrons are not mobile, and cannot flow as electrical current.
However, if an electron in the valence band acquires enough energy to reach the conduction band, it can flow freely among the nearly empty conduction band energy states. Furthermore it will also leave behind an electron hole that can flow as current exactly like a physical charged particle. Carrier ''generation'' describes processes by which electrons gain energy and move from the valence band to the conduction band, producing two mobile carriers; while ''recombination'' describes processes by which a conduction band electron loses energy and re-occupies the energy state of an electron hole in the valence band.
In a material at
thermal equilibrium generation and recombination are balanced, so that the net
charge carrier density remains constant. The equilibrium carrier density that results from the balance of these interactions is predicted by
thermodynamics. The resulting probability of occupation of energy states in each energy band is given by
Fermi-Dirac statistics.
Generation and recombination processes
Carrier generation and recombination result from interaction between
electrons and other carriers, either with the
lattice of the material, or with optical
photons. As the electron moves from one energy band to another, its gained or lost energy must take some other form, and the form of energy distinguishes various types of generation and recombination:
Shockley–Hall–Read (SHR) process
The electron in transition between bands passes through a state created in the middle of the band gap by an impurity in the lattice. The impurity state can absorb differences in momentum between the carriers, and so this process is the dominant generation and recombination process in
silicon and other
indirect bandgap materials. The energy is exchanged in the form of
lattice vibration, or
phonon, exchanging thermal energy with the material.
Photon exchange
During ''radiative recombination'', a form of '
spontaneous emission', a
photon is emitted with the wavelength corresponding to the energy released. This effect is the basis of
LEDs. Because the photon carries relatively little
momentum, radiative recombination is significant only in
direct bandgap materials.
When photons are present in the material, they can either be
absorbed, generating a pair of free carriers, or they can ''stimulate'' a recombination event, resulting in a generated photon with similar properties to the one responsible for the event. Absorption is the active process in
photodiodes,
solar cells, and other semiconductor
photodetectors, while '
stimulated emission' is responsible for laser action in
laser diodes.
Auger recombination
The energy is given to a third carrier, which is excited to a higher energy level without moving to another energy band. After the interaction, the third carrier normally loses its excess energy to thermal vibrations. Since this process is a three-particle interaction, it is normally only significant in nonequilibrium conditions when the carrier density is very high. The Auger generation process is not easily produced, because the third particle would have to begin the process in the unstable high-energy state.