A microwave absorption technique based on cavity perturbation theory i
s shown to be applicable for electrical conductivity measurements of b
oth a small, single-crystal particle and finely divided powder samples
when sigma values fall in either the low (sigma < 0.1 OMEGA-1 cm-1) o
r the intermediate (0.1 less-than-or-equal-to sigma less-than-or-equal
-to 100 OMEGA-1 cm-1) conductivity region. The results here pertain to
semiconductors in the latter region. If the skin depth of the materia
l becomes significantly smaller than the sample dimension parallel to
the E-field, an appreciable error can be introduced into the calculate
d conductivity values; however, this discrepancy is eliminated by corr
ecting for the field attenuation associated with the penetration depth
of the microwaves. A modification of this approach utilizing the skin
depth allows a first-order correction to be applied to powder samples
which results in the accurate measurement of absolute sigma values, a
nd results with doped Si powders are compared to a values obtained fro
m one small single particle using this microwave technique as well as
reported DC a values determined with single crystals. The use of this
microwave absorption technique with small particles having high surfac
e/volume ratios, such as catalyst supports and oxide catalysts, under
controlled environments can provide fundamental information about adso
rption and catalytic processes on such semiconductor surfaces. An appl
ication to a ZnO powder demonstrates this capability.