semiconductor limiter - meaning and definition. What is semiconductor limiter
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What (who) is semiconductor limiter - definition

ELECTROACUSTIC DEVICE
Limiting; Limiter circuit; Audio limiter; Hard limiter
  • Comparison of soft and hard clipping.

Semiconductor (artists)         
BRITISH ARTIST DUO RUTH JARMAN AND JOE GERHARDT
Semiconductor Films
Semiconductor (also Semiconductor Films) is UK artist duo Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. They have been working together for over twenty years producing visually and intellectually engaging moving image works which explore the material nature of our world and how we experience it through the lens of science and technology, questioning how these devices mediate our experiences.
Semiconductor device         
  • An n–p–n bipolar junction transistor structure
  • A stylized replica of the first transistor
  • Operation of a [[MOSFET]] and its Id-Vg curve. At first, when no gate voltage is applied. There is no inversion electron in the channel, the device is OFF. As gate voltage increase, the inversion electron density in the channel increase, the current increases, and the device turns on.
ELECTRONIC COMPONENT THAT EXPLOITS THE ELECTRONIC PROPERTIES OF SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIALS
Semiconductor devices; Semiconductor device physics; Semiconductor Devices; Semiconductor electronics; Semiconductor component; History of semiconductor device development
A semiconductor device is an electronic component that relies on the electronic properties of a semiconductor material (primarily silicon, germanium, and gallium arsenide, as well as organic semiconductors) for its function. Its conductivity lies between conductors and insulators.
semiconductor         
  • [[John Bardeen]], [[William Shockley]] and [[Walter Brattain]] developed the bipolar [[point-contact transistor]] in 1947.
  • [[Karl Ferdinand Braun]] developed the [[crystal detector]], the first [[semiconductor device]], in 1874.
  • ingot]] of [[monocrystalline silicon]]
  • [[Silicon]] crystals are the most common semiconducting materials used in [[microelectronics]] and [[photovoltaics]].
MATERIAL THAT HAS ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY INTERMEDIATE TO THAT OF A CONDUCTOR AND AN INSULATOR
Semiconductors; Semi-Conductors; Semi-conductor; Semiconductor physics; Semiconducting material; List of semiconductor devices; Semiconductor material; Semiconducting; Semi conductor; Semiconductive; Electronic Materials; Semiconduction; Semicon; Electronic materials; Semi-conducting; Semiconductivity; Semi conductors; Physics of semiconductors; Electronic substance
<electronics> A material, typically crystaline, which allows current to flow under certain circumstances. Common semiconductors are silicon, germanium, gallium arsenide. Semiconductors are used to make diodes, transistors and other basic "solid state" electronic components. As crystals of these materials are grown, they are "doped" with traces of other elements called donors or acceptors to make regions which are n- or p-type respectively for the electron model or p- or n-type under the hole model. Where n and p type regions adjoin, a junction is formed which will pass current in one direction (from p to n) but not the other, giving a diode. One model of semiconductor behaviour describes the doping elements as having either free electrons or holes dangling at the points in the crystal lattice where the doping elements replace one of the atoms of the foundation material. When external electrons are applied to n-type material (which already has free electrons present) the repulsive force of like charges causes the free electrons to migrate toward the junction, where they are attracted to the holes in the p-type material. Thus the junction conducts current. In contrast, when external electrons are applied to p-type material, the attraction of unlike charges causes the holes to migrate away from the junction and toward the source of external electrons. The junction thus becomes "depleted" of its charge carriers and is non-conducting. (1995-10-04)

Wikipedia

Limiter

In electronics, a limiter is a circuit that allows signals below a specified input power or level to pass unaffected while attenuating (lowering) the peaks of stronger signals that exceed this threshold. Limiting is a type of dynamic range compression. Clipping is an extreme version of limiting.

Limiting is any process by which the amplitude of a signal is prevented from exceeding a predetermined value.

Limiters are common as a safety device in live sound and broadcast applications to prevent sudden volume peaks from occurring. Limiters are also used as protective features in some components of sound reinforcement systems (e.g., powered mixing boards and power amplifiers) and in some bass amplifiers, to prevent unwanted distortion or loudspeaker damage.