132 research outputs found
Effects of many-electron jumps in relaxation and conductivity of Coulomb glasses
A numerical study of the energy relaxation and conductivity of the Coulomb
glass is presented. The role of many-electron transitions is studied by two
complementary methods: a kinetic Monte Carlo algorithm and a master equation in
configuration space method. A calculation of the transition rate for
two-electron transitions is presented, and the proper extension of this to
multi-electron transitions is discussed. It is shown that two-electron
transitions are important in bypassing energy barriers which effectively block
sequential one-electron transitions. The effect of two-electron transitions is
also discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Asymmetric metal-insulator transition in disordered ferromagnetic films
We present experimental data and a theoretical interpretation on the
conductance near the metal-insulator transition in thin ferromagnetic Gd films
of thickness b approximately 2-10 nm. A large phase relaxation rate caused by
scattering of quasiparticles off spin wave excitations renders the dephasing
length L_phi < b in the range of sheet resistances considered, so that the
effective dimension is d = 3. The observed approximate fractional temperature
power law of the conductivity is ascribed to the scaling regime near the
transition. The conductivity data as a function of temperature and disorder
strength collapse on to two scaling curves for the metallic and insulating
regimes. The best fit is obtained for a dynamical exponent z approximately 2.5
and a correlation length critical exponent \nu' approximately 1.4 on the
metallic side and a localization length exponent \nu approximately 0.8 on the
insulating side.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Logarithmic relaxation and stress aging in the electron glass
Slow relaxation and aging of the conductance are experimental features of a
range of materials, which are collectively known as electron glasses. We report
dynamic Monte Carlo simulations of the standard electron glass lattice model.
In a non-equilibrium state, the electrons will often form a Fermi distribution
with an effective electron temperature higher than the phonon bath temperature.
We study the effective temperature as a function of time in three different
situations: relaxation after a quench from an initial random state, during
driving by an external electric field and during relaxation after such driving.
We observe logarithmic relaxation of the effective temperature after a quench
from a random initial state as well as after driving the system for some time
with a strong electric field. For not too strong electric field and not
too long we observe that data for the effective temperature at different
waiting times collapse when plotted as functions of -- the so-called
simple aging. During the driving period we study how the effective temperature
is established, separating the contributions from the sites involved in jumps
from those that were not involved. It is found that the heating mainly affects
the sites involved in jumps, but at strong driving, also the remaining sites
are heated
Out of equilibrium electronic transport properties of a misfit cobaltite thin film
We report on transport measurements in a thin film of the 2D misfit Cobaltite
. Dc magnetoresistance measurements obey the modified
variable range hopping law expected for a soft Coulomb gap. When the sample is
cooled down, we observe large telegraphic-like fluctuations. At low
temperature, these slow fluctuations have non Gaussian statistics, and are
stable under a large magnetic field. These results suggest that the low
temperature state is a glassy electronic state. Resistance relaxation and
memory effects of pure magnetic origin are also observed, but without aging
phenomena. This indicates that these magnetic effects are not glassy-like and
are not directly coupled to the electronic part.Comment: accepted in Phys Rev B, Brief report
Technique for Magnetic Susceptibility Determination in the High Doped Semiconductors by Electron Spin Resonance
Method for determining the magnetic susceptibility in the high doped
semiconductors is considered. A procedure that is based on double integration
of the positive part of the derivative of the absorption line having a Dyson
shape and takes into account the depth of the skin layer is described. Analysis
is made for the example of arsenic doped germanium samples at a rather high
concentration corresponding to the insulator metal phase transition.Comment: Pages 13, figures 9, references 1
Theory of hopping conduction in arrays of doped semiconductor nanocrystals
The resistivity of a dense crystalline array of semiconductor nanocrystals
(NCs) depends in a sensitive way on the level of doping as well as on the NC
size and spacing. The choice of these parameters determines whether electron
conduction through the array will be characterized by activated
nearest-neighbor hopping or variable-range hopping (VRH). Thus far, no general
theory exists to explain how these different behaviors arise at different
doping levels and for different types of NCs. In this paper we examine a simple
theoretical model of an array of doped semiconductor NCs that can explain the
transition from activated transport to VRH. We show that in sufficiently small
NCs, the fluctuations in donor number from one NC to another provide sufficient
disorder to produce charging of some NCs, as electrons are driven to vacate
higher shells of the quantum confinement energy spectrum. This
confinement-driven charging produces a disordered Coulomb landscape throughout
the array and leads to VRH at low temperature. We use a simple computer
simulation to identify different regimes of conduction in the space of
temperature, doping level, and NC diameter. We also discuss the implications of
our results for large NCs with external impurity charges and for NCs that are
gated electrochemically.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures; extra schematic figures added; revised
introductio
The glass transition and the Coulomb gap in electron glasses
We establish the connection between the presence of a glass phase and the
appearance of a Coulomb gap in disordered materials with strongly interacting
electrons. Treating multiparticle correlations in a systematic way, we show
that in the case of strong disorder a continuous glass transition takes place
whose Landau expansion is identical to that of the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin
glass. We show that the marginal stability of the glass phase controls the
physics of these systems: it results in slow dynamics and leads to the
formation of a Coulomb gap
Electronic structure and light-induced conductivity in a transparent refractory oxide
Combined first-principles and experimental investigations reveal the
underlying mechanism responsible for a drastic change of the conductivity (by
10 orders of magnitude) following hydrogen annealing and UV-irradiation in a
transparent oxide, 12CaO.7Al2O3, found by Hayashi et al. The charge transport
associated with photo-excitation of an electron from H, occurs by electron
hopping. We identify the atoms participating in the hops, determine the exact
paths for the carrier migration, estimate the temperature behavior of the
hopping transport and predict a way to enhance the conductivity by specific
doping.Comment: 4 pages including 4 figure
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