photoconductive material - definitie. Wat is photoconductive material
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Wat (wie) is photoconductive material - definitie

AN OPTICAL AND ELECTRICAL PHENOMENON IN WHICH A MATERIAL BECOMES MORE ELECTRICALLY CONDUCTIVE DUE TO THE ABSORPTION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION SUCH AS VISIBLE LIGHT, ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT, INFRARED LIGHT, OR GAMMA RADIATION
Photoconductor; Photoconductors; Photoconductive; Radioconductivity; Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Radioconductivity; Photoconduction; Photoconductive effect

Auston switch         
  • Typical time response of a photocurrent generated with an Auston switch using a femtosecond laser pulse.
Photoconductive antenna
An Auston switch (also known as a photoconductive switch) is an optically gated antenna that is commonly used in the generation and detection of pulsed terahertz radiation. It is named after the physicist David H.
Kelvin–Voigt material         
VISCOELASTIC MATERIAL HAVING THE PROPERTIES BOTH OF ELASTICITY AND VISCOSITY
Kelvin solid; Kelvin material; Kelvin-Voigt Model; Kelvin-Voigt model; Voigt material; Kelvin model; Kelvin-Voigt material; Kelvin–Voigt model
A Kelvin-Voigt material, also called a Voigt material, is the most simple model viscoelastic material showing typical rubbery properties. It is purely elastic on long timescales (slow deformation), but shows additional resistance to fast deformation.
Photoconductive polymer         
  • 236x236px
  • (a)Charge immobilization due to a redox-irreversible side-reaction
  • (b)Charge immobilization due to a redox-irreversible side-reaction
Photo conductive polymers; Photoconductive polymers
Photoconductive polymers absorb electromagnetic radiation and produce an increase of electrical conductivity. Photoconductive polymers have been used in a wide variety of technical applications such as Xerography (electrophotography) and laser printing.

Wikipedia

Photoconductivity

Photoconductivity is an optical and electrical phenomenon in which a material becomes more electrically conductive due to the absorption of electromagnetic radiation such as visible light, ultraviolet light, infrared light, or gamma radiation.

When light is absorbed by a material such as a semiconductor, the number of free electrons and holes increases, resulting in increased electrical conductivity. To cause excitation, the light that strikes the semiconductor must have enough energy to raise electrons across the band gap, or to excite the impurities within the band gap. When a bias voltage and a load resistor are used in series with the semiconductor, a voltage drop across the load resistors can be measured when the change in electrical conductivity of the material varies the current through the circuit.

Classic examples of photoconductive materials include:

  • photographic film: Kodachrome, Fujifilm, Agfachrome, Ilford, etc., based on silver sulfide and silver bromide.
  • the conductive polymer polyvinylcarbazole, used extensively in photocopying (xerography);
  • lead sulfide, used in infrared detection applications, such as the U.S. Sidewinder and Soviet (now Russian) Atoll heat-seeking missiles;
  • selenium, employed in early television and xerography.

Molecular photoconductors include organic, inorganic, and – more rarely – coordination compounds.