Abstract
A study has been made of semiconduction in valine, glycine, diketopiperazine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, tryptophan, tyrosine and leucine, using compressed discs, and single crystals for the first three. Guard-ring measurements established a true bulk conduction for glycine. The Δε values were in the range 3.26–4.09 eV, whereas the optical absorption edges were around 5 eV. The log10σo values lay between 9 and 17. The results are explained on an electron injection mechanism with temperature variable surface states. “Dry” proteins have markedly lower Δε values, ca. 2.7 eV and σo values still explicable by an intrinsic generation of charge carriers. With proteins the discrepancy with the theoretical energy gap of 5 eV for the >CO.H—N< band system remains problematical.