This document discusses energy bands in solids and semiconductor devices. It explains how the discrete energy levels in isolated atoms merge and form continuous energy bands as atoms are brought together in a solid. In semiconductors, the valence band is full while the conduction band is empty, with a small band gap between them. Thermally excited electrons can cross this gap, making semiconductors weakly conductive. Doping a semiconductor with impurities introduces donors or acceptors that increase the number of free electrons or holes, making it an n-type or p-type extrinsic semiconductor. The carrier concentrations and conductivity of semiconductors are determined by factors like doping level, temperature, and carrier mobilities.