Solar cells A solar cell is an electrical device in which a semiconductor is exposed to light that is converted into electricity through the
photovoltaic effect. Electrons are either excited through the absorption of light, or if the band-gap energy of the material can be bridged,
electron-hole pairs are created. Simultaneously, a voltage potential is created. The charge carriers within the solar cell move through the semiconductor in order to cancel said potential, which is the drifting force that moves the electrons. Also, the electrons can be forced to move by diffusion from higher concentration to lower concentration of electrons. In order to maximize the efficiency of the solar cell, it is desirable to have as many charge carriers as possible collected at the electrodes of the solar cell. Thus, recombination of electrons (among other factors that influence efficiency) must be avoided. This corresponds to an increase in the carrier lifetime. Surface recombination occurs at the top of the solar cell, which makes it preferable to have layers of material that have great surface
passivation properties so as not to become affected by exposure to light over longer periods of time. Additionally, the same method of layering different semiconductor materials is used to reduce the capture probability of the electrons, which results in a decrease in trap-assisted SRH recombination, and an increase in carrier lifetime. Radiative (band-to-band) recombination is negligible in solar cells that have semiconductor materials with indirect bandgap structure. Auger recombination occurs as a limiting factor for solar cells when the concentration of excess electrons grows large at low doping rates. Otherwise, the doping-dependent SRH recombination is one of the primary mechanisms that reduces the electrons' carrier lifetime in solar cells.
Bipolar junction transistors A bipolar junction transistor is a type of transistor that is able to use electrons and electron holes as charge carriers. A BJT uses a
single crystal of material in its circuit that is divided into two types of semiconductor, an n-type and p-type. These two types of
doped semiconductors are spread over three different regions in respective order: the emitter region, the base region and the collector region. The emitter region and collector region are quantitively doped differently, but are of the same type of doping and share a base region, which is why the system is different from two diodes connected in series with each other. For a PNP-transistor, these regions are, respectively, p-type, n-type and p-type, and for a NPN-transistor, these regions are, respectively, n-type, p-type and n-type. For NPN-transistors in typical
forward-active operation, given an injection of charge carriers through the first junction from the emitter into the base region, electrons are the charge carriers that are transported diffusively through the base region towards the collector region. These are the
minority carriers of the base region. Analogously, for PNP-transistors, electronic holes are the minority carriers of the base region. The carrier lifetime of these minority carriers plays a crucial role in the charge flow of minority carriers in the base region, which is found between the two junctions. Depending on the BJT's mode of operation, recombination is either preferred, or to be avoided in the base region. In particular, for the aforementioned forward-active mode of operation, recombination is not preferable. Thus, in order to get as many minority carriers as possible from the base region into the collecting region before these recombine, the width of the base region must be small enough such that the minority carriers can diffuse in a smaller amount of time than the semiconductor's minority carrier lifetime. Equivalently, the width of the base region must be smaller than the diffusion length, which is the average length a charge carrier travels before recombining. Additionally, in order to prevent high rates of recombination, the base is only lightly doped with respect to the emitter and collector region. As a result of this, the charge carriers do not have a high probability of staying in the base region, which is their preferable region of occupation when recombining into a lower-energy state. For other modes of operation, like that of fast switching, a high recombination rate (and thus a short carrier lifetime) is desirable. The desired mode of operation, and the associated properties of the doped base region must be considered in order to facilitate the appropriate carrier lifetime. Presently, silicon and
silicon carbide are the materials used in most BJTs. The recombination mechanisms that must be considered in the base region are surface recombination near the base-emitter junction, as well as SRH- and Auger recombination in the base region. Specifically, Auger recombination increases when the amount of injected charge carriers grows, hence decreasing the efficiency of the current gain with growing injection numbers.
Semiconductor lasers In semiconductor lasers, the carrier lifetime is the time it takes an electron before recombining via non-radiative processes in the laser cavity. In the frame of the
rate equations model, carrier lifetime is used in the charge conservation equation as the time constant of the
exponential decay of carriers. The dependence of carrier lifetime on the carrier density is expressed as: :\frac{1}{\tau_n(N)}= A + BN + CN^2 where A, B and C are the non-radiative, radiative and Auger recombination coefficients and \tau_n(N) is the carrier lifetime. ==Measurement==