trick is to dump the heat to air this is how insulators work: have a chemical structr
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that tightly binds atoms to grid thus not allowing them to vibrate. Vibration is the def
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of heat. If you can't vibrate, you can't take in heat, so it gets dump to atmosphere
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Replying to @MorlockP
this is not correct. Even rigid semiconductors have phonons as well. @Warlord_Ralts
@ClarkHat@BrowningMachine@zero9300 /12 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @BostonDelendEst @MorlockP and
e.g., S, being indirect band gap, REQUIRES vibration to recombine holes/e- /2
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Replying to @BostonDelendEst @MorlockP and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonon https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_and_indirect_band_gaps … /3
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Replying to @BostonDelendEst @MorlockP
I get that you're talking macro-scale, but "doesn't/can't vibrate" is WRONG @Warlord_Ralts
@ClarkHat@BrowningMachine@zero9300 /41 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @BostonDelendEst @Loweeel and
Agreed! Read back through the thread and note that I talk mult times about how
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it DOES vibrate. You're picking on particular 140 out where I was sloppy.
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