In an n-type semiconductor, a pentavalent atom (like phosphorus or arsenic) is doped into a pure semiconductor (like silicon).
- The pentavalent atom forms covalent bonds using four of its electrons.
- The fifth electron becomes a free charge carrier, contributing to conduction.
- The impurity atom, after donating this extra electron, becomes a positively charged donor ion.
Even though there are extra electrons for conduction, the overall crystal remains electrically neutral because the donor atom itself is neutral before doping and just redistributes charges.
Thus:
- The assertion is true: n-type semiconductors are not negatively charged.
- The reason is also true: the pentavalent atom becomes a positive donor after donating its fifth electron.
- The reason correctly explains the assertion.
Final answer: Option (A)