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Journal ArticleDOI

Semi-conductors with partially and with completely filled3d-lattice bands

J. H. de Boer, +1 more
- Vol. 49, pp 59-71
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TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that if an electron is brought by thermal excitation from the lattice 3d band into the somewhat raised and less occupied levels a, a' (figure 1), these levels belong to Ni ions adjacent to a vacant Ni lattice point introduced by the deviations from stoichiometry, and two of these Ni ions are at the absolute zero Ni3+ ions.
Abstract
Attention is drawn to a class of semi-conductors or insulators with incompletely filled 3d bands. Their lack of conductivity, if the number of electrons per atom is an integer, is explained by the circumstance that a moving electron will have a large probability of being withdrawn to the initial atom, if only the potential barriers to be penetrated are sufficiently high to reduce the frequency of transition below a certain limit. This inhibiting factor disappears, if for ions of equal electronic levels the number of electrons per atom differs from an integer. In the case of NiO this condition is fulfilled if an electron is brought by thermal excitation from the lattice 3d band into the somewhat raised and less occupied levels a, a' (figure 1); these levels belong to Ni ions adjacent to a vacant Ni lattice point introduced by the deviations from stoichiometry, and two of these Ni ions are at the absolute zero Ni3+ ions. An analogous conduction mechanism holds for non-stoichiometric Cu2O, with a completely filled 3d band (figure 2). Photoconductivity is generally observed with substances with completely filled zones and never with substances of the NiO type. A tentative explanation is given for this fact on the basis of the model of figure 1 and figure 2. In non-stoechiometric ZnO vacant oxygen lattice points are assumed (figure 3); in that case the calculation of the lattice levels shows that at the lattice holes one Zn2+ is converted into Zn, whereas in the lattice the additional electrons form Zn+ ions, as will be the case after thermal transitions of the electrons belonging to these Zn atoms into the lattice 4s band.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Mixed Valence Chemistry-A Survey and Classification

TL;DR: In this article, a review is concerned with the neglected class of inorganic compounds, which contain ions of the same element in two different formal states of oxidation, and a number of references cite that many individual examples of this class have been studied, yet they have very rarely been treated as a class, and there has never before, to our knowledge, been a systematic attempt to classify their properties in terms of their electronic and molecular structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrons in disordered structures

Nevill Mott
- 01 Jan 1967 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the role of disordered structures in the evolution of the electron in disordered structure and propose a method to find disordered electron structures in a graph.
Reference EntryDOI

Metal‐Insulator Transitions

Journal ArticleDOI

The Verwey transition - a topical review

TL;DR: The story of the Verwey transition in magnetite over a period of about 90 years, from its discovery up to the present, can be subdivided into three eras as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical Properties and Cation Arrangement of Oxides with Spinel Structures II. Electronic Conductivity

TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between the electronic conductivity of certain spinels and the arrangement of the cations in the crystal structure was studied, and it was shown that the activation energy of the spinels is lowest for those cases in which the electrons can travel along the Fe of the 16-fold position.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Theory of Electronic Semi-Conductors

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of impurities on the electrical properties of semi-conductors has been investigated, and it was shown that impurities dominate the electrical conductivity of the semi-conductor.
Journal ArticleDOI

An X‐Ray Study of the Wüstite (FeO) Solid Solutions

TL;DR: A series of iron oxides with compositions between 76.08 and 76.72 percent Fe, all of them lying within the single phase solid solution area known as Wustite has been prepared and the lattice constants and densities of individual members determined.