The dopants, similar enough in structure and
valence to fit into the matrix, have one electron more or less than
the semiconductor; for example, doping with phosphorus, which has five
valence electrons, produces a (negative) n-type semiconductor, with an
extra electron which can be dislodged easily. Aluminum, boron, indium,
and gallium have only three valence electrons, and so a semiconductor
doped with them is (positive) p-type, and has holes" where the missing
electrons ought to be.
These holes behave just like electrons, except
that
they have an opposite, positive charge. (Holes are theoretical,
but so are electrons, and either or both may or may not exist, but we
know for sure that if one exists, they both do, because we can't
create something out of nothing in the physical world.) It is
important to understand that, although loosely bonded or extra
carriers exist in a substance, it is still neutral electrically,
because each atom's electrons are matched one for one by protons in
the nucleus.
The fun begins when the two semiconductor types
are intimately joined in a pn-junction, and the carriers are free to
wander. Being of opposite charge, they move toward each other, and may
cross the junction, depleting the region they came from, and
transferring their charge to their new region. This produces an
electric field, called gradient, which quickly reaches equilibrium
with the force of attraction of excess carriers. This field becomes a
permanent part of the device, a kind of slope that makes carriers tend
to slide across the junction when they get close.
When light strikes a Photovoltaic cell, atoms
are bombarded with photons, and give up electrons. When an electron
gets lopped off an atom, it leaves behind a hole, which has an equal
and opposite charge. Both the electron, with its negativ
e charge, and
the hole, with its positive charge, begin a random walk generally down
the gradient. If either carrier wanders across the junction, the field
and the nature of the semiconductor material discourage it from recrossing.
A proportion of carriers which cross this
junction can be harvested by completing a circuit from a grid on the
cell's surface to a collector on the back plane. In the cell, the
light pumps" electrons out one side of the cell, through the circuit,
and back to the other side, energizing any electrical devices (like
the battery in the diagram) found along the way.

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