Tuesday, March 20, 2012

1203.3889 (Brian Skinner et al.)

Theory of hopping conduction in arrays of doped semiconductor
nanocrystals
   [PDF]

Brian Skinner, Tianran Chen, B. I. Shklovskii
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, driven by the large gaps between shells of the quantum confinement energy. This gap-driven charging produces a Coulomb gap in the electron density of states at the Fermi level 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.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1203.3889

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