Brandon's Semiconductor Simulator
Brandon Li
Educational tool for the simulation and visualization of semiconductor devices. Users can draw circuits and devices with just a few brush strokes. This is a fully interactive, realistic simulation with many visualization options and a variety of hand-made demonstrations of semiconductor devices.
System Requirements
Minimum Requirements
Recommended Requirements
About This Game
Brandon's semiconductor simulator is an educational tool for the simulation and visualization of semiconductor devices. It has an intuitive and easy to use interface that allows users to draw circuits and devices with just a few brush strokes. It is a fully interactive, realistic simulation that incorporates both electromagnetism and the diffusion-drift equations. There are many visualization options and the software comes with a bunch of hand-made demonstrations of electrical circuits, diodes, transistors, and just about every kind of semiconductor device. The steam version comes with cloud and workshop integration as well as achievements.
Features:
Interactive circuit drawing
Visualization of electromagnetic fields and charge carriers
Many materials (metals, semiconductors, dielectrics, and more)
Steam cloud and sharing saves via workshop
Physics features:
The simulation is set on a two-dimensional grid with a solver that computes the 2D Maxwell equations. This means the electric field lies in the same plane as the display whereas the magnetic field is perpendicular. On top of this, there are two types of charge carriers, electrons and holes, which experience electrical and chemical forces. The simulation uses a FDTD (finite-difference time domain) scheme obtained by discretizing the Maxwell equations combined with the drift-diffusion equations. The final simulation is able to demonstrate many of the important properties of semiconductors and semiconductor devices, such as:
PN junctions
Metal-semiconductor junctions
Thermoelectricity
Contact potentials
Heterojunctions
Simulation of common semiconductor devices, eg. BJTs, MOSFETs, JFETs, diodes, etc.
Since version 2.0, the simulation also supports the following:
Velocity saturation
Radiative, trap-assisted, and auger recombination
User-defined materials
Why does this exist?
I created this simulator because I wanted to get a deeper understanding of how semiconductors work. It's been my experience that there's been a lack of good simulations that demonstrate advanced topics in physics. There certainly exist many educational physics simulations, but they're all either aimed at lower educational levels, or they are very restricted in how the user can interact with the system. I hope my simulation succeeds in filling this gap.
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