Fieldeffect
Field effect, also known as fieldeffect, is the modulation of a material's electrical properties by an external electric field. In semiconductors, applying a voltage to a gate electrode changes the carrier concentration near an interface, creating depletion or accumulation layers that alter conductance. The field effect is a foundational principle for modern solid-state electronics.
A field-effect transistor (FET) uses the field effect to control current between source and drain terminals.
Common FET types include metal-oxide-semiconductor FETs (MOSFETs), which use a thin oxide dielectric; junction FETs (JFETs),
Field-effect science and devices underpin digital logic, analog amplifiers, and radio-frequency circuits. The name field effect