Home

conductionele

Conductionele is a term proposed in some theoretical or speculative discussions to denote a distinct type of charge carrier responsible for electrical conduction in certain materials. It is not a standard term in established physics, and there is no consensus or experimental confirmation of its existence. In most physical theories, electrical conduction in solids is described in terms of conduction electrons (and, in some contexts, holes as positive charge carriers), along with their interactions with the crystal lattice (phonons), impurities, and other quasiparticles.

In proposed frameworks, conductionele would be an emergent or composite carrier that can act in parallel with

Because the term is not standard, its exact definition varies by author and context. When used, it

or
independently
from
ordinary
electrons,
potentially
arising
from
strong
electronic
correlations,
lattice
distortions,
or
topological
effects.
Such
a
carrier
might
be
invoked
to
explain
anomalous
transport
properties
that
are
not
easily
accounted
for
by
electrons
and
holes
alone,
such
as
unusual
temperature
dependence
of
conductivity,
nonlinear
transport,
or
anomalous
Hall-like
signals.
However,
these
ideas
remain
speculative
and
have
not
established
predictive
power
or
experimental
validation.
is
essential
to
specify
its
nature,
how
it
couples
to
electric
fields,
its
effective
mass
and
charge,
and
how
it
differs
from
established
charge
carriers.
In
mainstream
literature,
researchers
would
instead
model
any
observed
anomalies
with
existing
concepts
like
polaronic
carriers,
spinons,
excitons,
or
other
quasiparticles.