Variable-range hopping

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Variable-range hopping is a model used to describe carrier transport in a disordered semiconductor or in amorphous solid by hopping in an extended temperature range.[1] It has a characteristic temperature dependence of

σ=σ0e(T0/T)β

where σ is the conductivity and β is a parameter dependent on the model under consideration.

Mott variable-range hopping

The Mott variable-range hopping describes low-temperature conduction in strongly disordered systems with localized charge-carrier states[2] and has a characteristic temperature dependence of

σ=σ0e(T0/T)1/4

for three-dimensional conductance (with β = 1/4), and is generalized to d-dimensions

σ=σ0e(T0/T)1/(d+1).

Hopping conduction at low temperatures is of great interest because of the savings the semiconductor industry could achieve if they were able to replace single-crystal devices with glass layers.[3]

Derivation

The original Mott paper introduced a simplifying assumption that the hopping energy depends inversely on the cube of the hopping distance (in the three-dimensional case). Later it was shown that this assumption was unnecessary, and this proof is followed here.[4] In the original paper, the hopping probability at a given temperature was seen to depend on two parameters, R the spatial separation of the sites, and W, their energy separation. Apsley and Hughes noted that in a truly amorphous system, these variables are random and independent and so can be combined into a single parameter, the range between two sites, which determines the probability of hopping between them.

Mott showed that the probability of hopping between two states of spatial separation R and energy separation W has the form:

Pexp[2αRWkT]

where α−1 is the attenuation length for a hydrogen-like localised wave-function. This assumes that hopping to a state with a higher energy is the rate limiting process.

We now define =2αR+W/kT, the range between two states, so Pexp(). The states may be regarded as points in a four-dimensional random array (three spatial coordinates and one energy coordinate), with the "distance" between them given by the range .

Conduction is the result of many series of hops through this four-dimensional array and as short-range hops are favoured, it is the average nearest-neighbour "distance" between states which determines the overall conductivity. Thus the conductivity has the form

σexp(nn)

where nn is the average nearest-neighbour range. The problem is therefore to calculate this quantity.

The first step is to obtain 𝒩(), the total number of states within a range of some initial state at the Fermi level. For d-dimensions, and under particular assumptions this turns out to be

𝒩()=Kd+1

where K=NπkT3×2dαd. The particular assumptions are simply that nn is well less than the band-width and comfortably bigger than the interatomic spacing.

Then the probability that a state with range is the nearest neighbour in the four-dimensional space (or in general the (d+1)-dimensional space) is

Pnn()=𝒩()exp[𝒩()]

the nearest-neighbour distribution.

For the d-dimensional case then

nn=0(d+1)Kd+1exp(Kd+1)d.

This can be evaluated by making a simple substitution of t=Kd+1 into the gamma function, Γ(z)=0tz1etdt

After some algebra this gives

nn=Γ(d+2d+1)K1d+1

and hence that

σexp(T1d+1).

Non-constant density of states

When the density of states is not constant (odd power law N(E)), the Mott conductivity is also recovered, as shown in this article.

Efros–Shklovskii variable-range hopping

Template:See also The Efros–Shklovskii (ES) variable-range hopping is a conduction model which accounts for the Coulomb gap, a small jump in the density of states near the Fermi level due to interactions between localized electrons.[5] It was named after Alexei L. Efros and Boris Shklovskii who proposed it in 1975.[5]

The consideration of the Coulomb gap changes the temperature dependence to

σ=σ0e(T0/T)1/2

for all dimensions (i.e. β = 1/2).[6][7]

See also

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Notes

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  1. Template:Cite journal
  2. Template:Cite journal
  3. P.V.E. McClintock, D.J. Meredith, J.K. Wigmore. Matter at Low Temperatures. Blackie. 1984 Template:ISBN.
  4. Template:Cite journal
  5. 5.0 5.1 Template:Cite journal
  6. Template:Cite journal
  7. Template:Cite journal