Semiconductor Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Semiconductor stocks.

Semiconductor Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Sep 19 SOXX Wall Street Breaks Records, Chipmakers Rally, Tesla Hits 2-Month High As Fed Cut Drives Risk-On Mode: What's Driving Markets Thursday?
Sep 19 ARM Why Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks Broadcom, TSMC, and Arm Holdings Were Moving Higher Today
Sep 19 ARM Arm reaches for 20% revenue growth on AI tailwinds: JP Morgan
Sep 19 ARM Jim Cramer on ARM Holdings plc (ARMH): ‘Can It Keep Running?’
Sep 19 ARM Raymond James Experts Say Edge AI Was A Key Catalyst For Arm Holdings Plc (ARM)
Sep 18 SOXX What has Taiwan Semiconductor Stock Done Since Nvidia Earnings?
Sep 18 TER TER Partners With Siemens for Robotics: How Should You Play the Stock?
Sep 18 TER Wall Street Analysts See Teradyne (TER) as a Buy: Should You Invest?
Sep 18 ARM Arm, Broadcom, Nvidia in spotlight as William Blair starts coverage on trio
Sep 18 TER Semiconductor Manufacturing Stocks Q2 Highlights: Teradyne (NASDAQ:TER)
Sep 17 TER Teradyne (TER) Beats Stock Market Upswing: What Investors Need to Know
Sep 17 ARM Arm Holdings plc (NASDAQ:ARM): A Chip Stock Powering The AI Boom
Sep 17 TER Teradyne, Inc. (NASDAQ:TER): A Chip Stock Powering The AI Boom
Sep 17 FN 4 Top Electronics Stocks With Bright Industry Prospects to Buy
Sep 17 TER Teradyne Robotics and Siemens announce strategic collaboration
Sep 17 TER Teradyne Robotics and Siemens Announce a Strategic Collaboration for the Siemens Experience Center at MxD to Showcase the Future of Automation in the U.S.
Sep 17 ARM Returns On Capital At Arm Holdings (NASDAQ:ARM) Paint A Concerning Picture
Sep 17 ASX ASE: Still The Global OSAT Powerhouse (Rating Downgrade)
Sep 16 ARM Stock Of The Day: Where Will ARM Reversal End?
Sep 16 ARM Why Broadcom, Taiwan Semiconductor, and Arm Holdings Fell on Monday
Semiconductor

A semiconductor material has an electrical conductivity value falling between that of a metal, like copper, gold, etc. and an insulator, such as glass. Their resistance decreases as their temperature increases, which is behaviour opposite to that of a metal. Their conducting properties may be altered in useful ways by the deliberate, controlled introduction of impurities ("doping") into the crystal structure. Where two differently-doped regions exist in the same crystal, a semiconductor junction is created. The behavior of charge carriers which include electrons, ions and electron holes at these junctions is the basis of diodes, transistors and all modern electronics. Some examples of semiconductors are silicon, germanium, and gallium arsenide. After silicon, gallium arsenide is the second most common semiconductor used in laser diodes, solar cells, microwave frequency integrated circuits, and others. Silicon is a critical element for fabricating most electronic circuits.
Semiconductor devices can display a range of useful properties such as passing current more easily in one direction than the other, showing variable resistance, and sensitivity to light or heat. Because the electrical properties of a semiconductor material can be modified by doping, or by the application of electrical fields or light, devices made from semiconductors can be used for amplification, switching, and energy conversion.
The conductivity of silicon is increased by adding a small amount of pentavalent (antimony, phosphorus, or arsenic) or trivalent (boron, gallium, indium) atoms (part in 108). This process is known as doping and resulting semiconductors are known as doped or extrinsic semiconductors. Apart from doping, the conductivity of a semiconductor can equally be improved by increasing its temperature. This is contrary to the behaviour of a metal in which conductivity decreases with increase in temperature.
The modern understanding of the properties of a semiconductor relies on quantum physics to explain the movement of charge carriers in a crystal lattice. Doping greatly increases the number of charge carriers within the crystal. When a doped semiconductor contains mostly free holes it is called "p-type", and when it contains mostly free electrons it is known as "n-type". The semiconductor materials used in electronic devices are doped under precise conditions to control the concentration and regions of p- and n-type dopants. A single semiconductor crystal can have many p- and n-type regions; the p–n junctions between these regions are responsible for the useful electronic behavior.
Although some pure elements and many compounds display semiconductor properties, silicon, germanium, and compounds of gallium are the most widely used in electronic devices. Elements near the so-called "metalloid staircase", where the metalloids are located on the periodic table, are usually used as semiconductors.
Some of the properties of semiconductor materials were observed throughout the mid 19th and first decades of the 20th century. The first practical application of semiconductors in electronics was the 1904 development of the cat's-whisker detector, a primitive semiconductor diode used in early radio receivers. Developments in quantum physics in turn allowed the development of the transistor in 1947 and the integrated circuit in 1958.

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