A
semimetal is a material with a very small overlap between the bottom of the
conduction band and the top of the
valence band. According to
electronic band theory, solids can be classified as
insulators,
semiconductors, semimetals, or
metals. In insulators and semiconductors the filled valence band is separated from an empty conduction band by a
band gap. For insulators, the magnitude of the band gap is larger (e.g. > 4
eV) than that of a semiconductor (e.g. < 4 eV).
Metals have a partially filled conduction band. A semimetal is a material with a very small overlap between the bottom of the
conduction band and the top of the
valence band. A semimetal thus has no band gap and a negligible
density of states at the
Fermi level. A metal, by contrast, has an appreciable density of states at the Fermi level because the conduction band is partially filled.