LDR
A photo resistor or light dependent resistor (LDR) is a resistor whose resistance
decreases with increasing incident light intensity. It can also be referred to
as a photo conductor.
A photoresistor is made of a high resistance semiconductor. If light falling on the device is of high enough frequency, photons absorbed
by the semiconductor give bound electrons enough energy to jump into the conduction band. The resulting free electron (and its hole partner)
conduct electricity, thereby lowering resistance.
A photoelectric device can be either intrinsic
or extrinsic. An intrinsic semiconductor has its own charge carriers and is not an efficient semiconductor, e.g. silicon. In intrinsic
devices the only available electrons are in the valence band, and hence the photon must have enough energy to excite the electron
across the entire band gap. Extrinsic devices have impurities, also called dopants, added
whose ground state energy is closer to the conduction band; since the electrons
do not have as far to jump, lower energy photons (i.e., longer wavelengths and
lower frequencies) are sufficient to trigger the device. If a sample of silicon
has some of its atoms replaced by phosphorus atoms (impurities), there will be
extra electrons available for conduction. This is an example of an extrinsic
semiconductor.
APPLICATIONS
Photoresistor come in many different types.
Inexpensive cadmium
sulfide cells can be found in many
consumer items such as camera light meters, street lights, clock radios, alarms, and
outdoor clocks.
They are also used in some dynamic compressors together with a small incandescent lamp or light emitting diode to control gain reduction.
Lead sulfide (PbS) and indium antimonide (InSb) LDRs (light dependent resistor) are used for the mid infrared
spectral region. Ge:Cu photoconductors
are among the best far-infrared detectors available, and are used for infrared
astronomy and infrared spectroscopy.
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