HAHA...WHAT A BEAUTIFUL WAY TO EXPLAIN MOT. I APPLAUD YOUR ANALOGY, STORY TELLING AND STYLE. BRAVO. I CAME FOR SEMICONDUCTOR LEARNING BUT GOT MY Mol Orb Theory UNDERSTANDING MORE STABLE (LOL).
@rockapedra113021 сағат бұрын
I thought that the electrons were just "kinda loose" in conductors, LOL.
@vb1419Күн бұрын
I can only subscribe and follow, but you have definitely gained my attention. I appreciate your ability to demonstrate how a complicated subject, could be understood at a more elementary level. Please keep it up! 😀
@PGW90RU14Күн бұрын
I'm very glad to understand the fundamental mechanism of semiconductor from this video! Tyvm!
@anurag77719Күн бұрын
Came to know about you after watching a video from breaking taps. I am so happy to find these brilliant knowledge filled channels. Subscribed and staying intune for future videos. Till then will catch up on all exisiting videos!
@mikefixacКүн бұрын
I bow before you. Thank you, thank you.
@alunicatКүн бұрын
Whatever you are doing, I want more
@makylemur7019Күн бұрын
In the 1970s I could get 70% HF in a gallon polyethylene jug. The polyethylene was stained black and the exterior surface was covered with warts. This alone inspired extreme caution. I used the chemical to make fluoroboric acid.
@projectsinflight16 сағат бұрын
oh my god that is so scary lol. i am glad you still have all your fingers
@johnlampe67852 күн бұрын
A thank you to the author for an enlightening explanation for this complete novice. John lampe.
@li-cehu48152 күн бұрын
Thank! Just a tiny denation to exprees my appreciation. This is a really good and clean veido. Hope to see more. : )
@ds-k78782 күн бұрын
5:21 silver conductive epoxy 8331
@BartvandenDonk2 күн бұрын
I liked your explanation a lot. The switching between precise and hand drawing adds a visual to following your explanation! (Keep using it) What I missed though is explaining superconductivity at 0 K. Omitting the magnetic field doesn't explain all of the theory.
@BartvandenDonk2 күн бұрын
And 1 other thing that will make it more complicated is: what does it do in 3D. You explanation is mostly drawn in 2D. That's ok for the math, but in reality all is 3D. I know you understand what I mean. Keep on the good work.
@abdennour1832 күн бұрын
You can use paint of photo resist
@edwardcarr97022 күн бұрын
Wish you were around when I did electronics, I failed that paper and so did the other 80% of the class.
@marthareddy95542 күн бұрын
Excellent 🙏
@7177YT2 күн бұрын
Brilliant! Thank you?
@alihejazi42763 күн бұрын
Very helpful information ❤
@hayrigulle17303 күн бұрын
This is profound! It's so well done man, I honestly can't think how you can improve on this. Gained a sub and honestly you deserve at least a mil.
@smabedi3 күн бұрын
Excellent!
@Paul_Ch523 күн бұрын
Very good. Looking at the comments here a month on shows you hit a homer. The depth is quite good (the more QFT the better) and you do an excellent job on the visuals. Yes, please do more.
@solapowsj253 күн бұрын
Photons transmitted through a crystal glass have a smaller diameter than that in free space. Electron via the conduction band pass freely. Semiconductors are intermediate in their ability to conduct.
@weirdo84353 күн бұрын
too short.
@jannegrey5934 күн бұрын
This is rare. Long, but not too long video that explains how physics of semiconductors work - a complex topic - in simple terms and goes from basically 0 knowledge to all necessary knowledge for a beginner to understand how semiconductor materials work. It won't be for everyone (for example I did know physics of it, but until recently I didn't know how it was utilized and there will be people to whom starting from 0 will mean that half of the video is repeating what they know), but it is very approachable. The only "nitpick" I could think off is semantics. Due to double meaning of the word semiconductor, one might think that this video cover also their application not just material part. And even in that "department", one could argue that doping should have been covered. But even if this was a standalone video it would be very good. As part of the series - it is great. Now only complaint I can have is that next part isn't out yet 😉
@SodexoVincent4 күн бұрын
Simply brilliant!
@concinnity96764 күн бұрын
Subscribed. Nicely done. EE here. I found it long for my attention span, but you covered the physics behind the band gap. I also want to see animation of how the BJT transports carriers from the base to the collector by diffusion. I also want to see how to tune that band gap to the spectrum of the sun. Or maybe to the waste heat from some process.
@cgarzs4 күн бұрын
Cutting from a black screen to all white wikipedia is pretty jarring. Could you use a dark background plugin for the browser screenshots? Dark Reader and Dark Background and Light Text are both good.
@Pawelll754 күн бұрын
mv²/2
@jacobeisbrenner7645 күн бұрын
Im really enjoying this series as I just found it a few days ago. One suggestion which could be of use is to maybe create your own spincoater. This could potentially help with your silver deposition if spun at slow enough speeds using a dropper.
@joerullez93505 күн бұрын
This is golden. Extremely well made video.
@bill80656 күн бұрын
bruh youre the goat
@icoudntfindaname7 күн бұрын
Alr, you just casually made the most understandable explanation of covalent bond I have heard in my entire life... ❤ <- thanks in advance for my grades Edit: OMFG you also explained molecular orbitals, ILYSM
@arktessellator_107 күн бұрын
This literally the most badass video on how actually the internal mechancis of atoms work💯🫡
@BrendaEM7 күн бұрын
Interesting video. Thank you. Perhaps a chemistry person, perhaps Nurd Rage or Nile Red might inspired to do a titration, but in a way, you found a new way to find the molar mass : ) You might be able to dilute the Armor etch, which might keep it from drying, too, as well as perhaps put it in your confront zone. Otherwise, perhaps putting in a sealed box with a wet sponge might put enough moisture in the air to keep it from drying.
@blonehou85228 күн бұрын
Amazing video! Finally tied a bunch of seemingly unrelated stuff I've learned during chem and physics courses into one coherent picture.
@tanvirhasan84868 күн бұрын
Awesome
@arfyness8 күн бұрын
yo, i am here to stick around and learn thank you so much!
@jezzamobile8 күн бұрын
Wow! Excellent video - Thankyou! Closest I've come yet to getting an overview perspective from high school chemistry to electronics theory 😎👍
@mikecawthorn78069 күн бұрын
Good job
@hiepchu60289 күн бұрын
I hope you can make more videos about semiconductor packing
@ja72609 күн бұрын
Had the biggest aha moment 😭awesome work looking forward for more 👍
@Taygetea9 күн бұрын
Turns out there are actually devices that use the ionization of hydrogen (allowing an arc to cross a gap at will) as a switch, theyre called krytrons and theyre export controlled in the US because of their usefulness in triggering nuclear devices
@Taygetea9 күн бұрын
i saw you say that and started imagining stabbing two tungsten electrodes into a heat-softened fluorescent tube, and then started googling and found those
@projectsinflight9 күн бұрын
well this is... interesting. i want to make one but i definitely don't want the channel to get banned lol
@kevinleach30510 күн бұрын
thank you
@lionelmartinez681010 күн бұрын
Great video. Could you make another video explaining the Kroning Pening model? Thank
@kushaljain00111 күн бұрын
Subscribed for future videos. This was really good. To me, it helped connects certain dots without getting into the maths (good enough for me).
11 күн бұрын
Dude, good job. Last year I did think to dive in this hobby. My big problem was to get the silicon wafer and the HF safety problem.
@projectsinflight10 күн бұрын
yeah i feel you. i delayed this project for years out of fear of HF. i eventually decided that every hobby is risky to some extent, and that as long as i was using HF in a safe manner i was ok with the level of risk.
11 күн бұрын
That's awesome! Thanks for posting the results! Can you try Sodium Hydroxide and Potassium Hydroxide? They are safer than HF.
@RobertXxx-uh6lr11 күн бұрын
Maybe something could you explain about the current conductivity in the semiconductor ? Which has something to do with the Fermi's energy ball.
@bmx666bmx66611 күн бұрын
18:29 😂😂😂
@ShcherbynaM11 күн бұрын
"Nothing can change rubber from an insulator to a conductor." High Voltage: Hold my beer
@projectsinflight10 күн бұрын
haha
@bmx666bmx66611 күн бұрын
Thank you so much! I watched the video several times. It was a difficult challenge for me, but in the end, I got everything! My brain just exploded! Amazing!!!