Community : MathModDB
Available identifiers
MaRDI QID Q6675396
mathematical model describing the semi-classical transport of free electrons and holes in a self-consistent electric field
Also known as van Roosbroeck model
The drift-diffusion system describes the semi-classical transport of free electrons and holes in a self-consistent electric field using a drift-diffusion approximation. It became the standard model to describe the current flow in semiconductor devices such as diodes, transistors, LEDs, solar cells and lasers, as well as quantum nanostructures and organic semiconductors.Private communication by Thomas Koprucki (Nov. 2025): Drift-diffusion models are closely related to reaction-diffusion models, Poisson-Nernst-Planck-models, semiconductor equation. And they are also used for the transport of ions in biological cells, see work by Christine Keller (WIAS) et al.: https://doi.org/10.3390/e27090981
List of contained entities
Boltzmann approximation for electrons
n ( ψ , ϕ n ) = N c exp ( q ( ψ − ϕ n ) − E c k B T )
q represents elementary charge
E c represents band edge energy for conduction band
N c represents density of states for conduction band
T represents temperature
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
ψ represents electric potential
k B represents Boltzmann constant
n represents electron density
Boltzmann approximation for holes
p ( ψ , ϕ p ) = N v exp ( q ( ϕ p − ψ ) + E v k B T )
q represents elementary charge
E v represents band edge energy for valence band
N v represents density of states for valence band
T represents temperature
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
ψ represents electric potential
k B represents Boltzmann constant
p represents hole density
Dirichlet boundary condition for electric potential
ϕ ( r , t ) | Γ k = ψ 0 + U k ( t )
boundary condition
U k represents applied external voltage
Γ k represents electrode interfaces
ϕ represents electric potential
t represents time
Dirichlet boundary condition for electron Fermi potential
ϕ n | Γ k = U k
boundary condition
U k represents applied external voltage
Γ k represents electrode interfaces
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
Dirichlet boundary condition for hole Fermi potential
ϕ n | Γ k = U k
boundary condition
U k represents applied external voltage
Γ k represents electrode interfaces
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
Neumann boundary condition for electric potential
n ⋅ ∇ ϕ ( r , t ) | Γ N = 0
boundary condition
Γ N represents electrode interfaces
ϕ represents electric potential
t represents time
n represents unit normal vector
Neumann boundary condition for electron Fermi potential
n ⋅ ∇ ψ | Γ N = 0
boundary condition
Γ N represents electrode interfaces
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
n represents unit normal vector
Neumann boundary condition for hole Fermi potential
n ⋅ ∇ ϕ p | Γ N = 0
boundary condition
Γ N represents electrode interfaces
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
n represents unit normal vector
Poisson's equation for the electric potential (semiconductors)
− ∇ ⋅ ( ϵ s ∇ ψ ) = q ( C + p ( ψ , ϕ p ) − n ( ψ , ϕ n ) )
C represents doping profile
ϵ s represents permittivity
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
ψ represents electric potential
n represents electron density
p represents hole density
q represents elementary charge
continuity equation for electrons
∇ ⋅ j n = q R ( ψ , ϕ n , ϕ p )
R represents recombination of electron hole pairs
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
ψ represents electric potential
j n represents electric current density of electrons
q represents elementary charge
continuity equation for holes
∇ ⋅ j p = − q R ( ψ , ϕ n , ϕ p )
R represents recombination of electron hole pairs
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
ψ represents electric potential
j p represents electric current density of holes
q represents elementary charge
current density equation for electrons
j n = − q μ n n ( ψ , ϕ n ) ∇ ϕ n
ϕ n represents Fermi potential for electrons
ψ represents electric potential
n represents electron density
q represents elementary charge
μ n represents mobility of electrons
j n represents electric current density of electrons
current density equation for holes
j p = − q μ p p ( ψ , ϕ p ) ∇ ϕ p
ϕ p represents Fermi potential for holes
ψ represents electric potential
p represents hole density
q represents elementary charge
μ p represents mobility of holes
j p represents electric current density of holes
List of computational tasks
Described at:
List of discretizations
https://archive.org/details/bstj29-4-560
Further items linking to drift-diffusion model
This page was built for model: drift-diffusion model