SnO: First Stable P-Type 2D Semiconductor Discovered (phys.org)
New submitter Namarrgon writes: Transistors made with Ashutosh Tiwari's new semiconducting material could lead to computers and smartphones that are more than 100 times faster than regular devices. While researchers in this field have recently discovered new types of 2D material such as graphene, molybdenun disulfide and borophene, they have been materials that only allow the movement of N-type, or negative, electrons. In order to create an electronic device, however, you need semiconductor material that allows the movement of both negative electrons and positive charges known as "holes." The tin monoxide material discovered by Tiwari and his team at the University of Utah is the first stable P-type 2D semiconductor material ever in existence.
Tin + Oxygen sounds a lot cheaper (and more readily available) than those iridium, molybdenum, etc compounds, too
-SaNo
they have been materials that only allow the movement of N-type, or negative, electrons. In order to create an electronic device, however, you need semiconductor material that allows the movement of both negative electrons and positive charges known as "holes."
Captain pedantic here. Electron holes are not positive charges. They are the absence of an electron in a lattice where one could exist. This "hole" can be treated for convenience and practicality like a positively charged particle but that isn't technically the same thing.
n-type (negative) electrons
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N-type semiconductors... the materials have excess electrons, and leverage that.
P-type semiconductors... the materials have an electron deficit, creating "holes" in the structure, and the material leverages those deficits.
There are no "positive" electrons. Well, there are, sort of, but they have little to nothing to do with n-type and p-type materials. Unless physics has completely rewritten semiconductor theory while I wasn't looking, which I suppose is possible.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.