Charge transport mechanisms

Charge transport mechanisms are theoretical models that aim to quantitatively describe the electric current flow through a given medium.

Theory

Crystalline solids and molecular solids are two opposite extreme cases of materials that exhibit substantially different transport mechanisms. While in atomic solids transport is intra-molecular, also known as band transport, in molecular solids the transport is inter-molecular, also known as hopping transport. The two different mechanisms result in different charge mobilities.

In disordered solids, disordered potentials result in weak localization effects (traps), which reduce the mean free path, and hence the mobility, of mobile charges. Carrier recombination also decreases mobility.

Comparison between band transport and hopping transport
Parameter Band transport (ballistic transport) Hopping transport
Examples crystalline semiconductors disordered solids, polycrystalline and amorphous semiconductors
Underlying mechanism Delocalized molecular wavefunctions over the entire volume Transition between localized sites via tunnelling (electrons) or overcoming potential barriers (ions)
Inter-site distance Bond length (less than 1 nm) Typically more than 1 nm
Mean free path Larger than the inter-site distance Inter-site distance
Mobility Typically larger than 1 cm2/Vs; independent of electric field; decreases with increasing temperature Typically smaller than 0.01 cm2/Vs; depends on electric field; increases with increasing temperature

Starting with Ohm's law and using the definition of conductivity, it is possible to derive the following common expression for current as a function of carrier mobility μ and applied electric field E:

The relationship holds when the concentration of localized states is significantly higher than the concentration of charge carriers, and assuming that hopping events are independent from each other.

Generally, the carrier mobility μ depends on temperature T, on the applied electric field E, and the concentration of localized states N. Depending on the model, increased temperature may either increase or decrease carrier mobility, applied electric field can increase mobility by contributing to thermal ionization of trapped charges, and increased concentration of localized states increases the mobility as well. Charge transport in the same material may have to be described by different models, depending on the applied field and temperature.[1]

Concentration of localized states

Carrier mobility strongly depends on the concentration of localized states in a non-linear fashion.[2] In the case of nearest-neighbour hopping, which is the limit of low concentrations, the following expression can be fitted to the experimental results:[3]

where is the concentration and is the localization length of the localized states. This equation is characteristic of incoherent hopping transport, which takes place at low concentrations, where the limiting factor is the exponential decay of hopping probability with inter-site distance.[4]

Sometimes this relation is expressed for conductivity, rather than mobility:

where is the concentration of randomly distributed sites, is concentration independent, is the localization radius, and is a numerical coefficient.[4]

At high concentrations, a deviation from the nearest-neighbour model is observed, and variable-range hopping is used instead to describe transport. Variable range hopping can be used to describe disordered systems such as molecularly-doped polymers, low molecular weight glasses and conjugated polymers.[3] In the limit of very dilute systems, the nearest-neighbour dependence is valid, but only with .[3]

Temperature dependence

At low carrier densities, the Mott formula for temperature-dependent conductivity is used to describe hopping transport.[3] In variable hopping it is given by:

where is a parameter signifying a characteristic temperature. For low temperatures, assuming a parabolic shape of the density of states near the Fermi level, the conductivity is given by:

At high carrier densities, an Arrhenius dependence is observed:[3]

In fact, the electrical conductivity of disordered materials under DC bias has a similar form for a large temperature range, also known as activated conduction:

Applied electric field

High electric fields cause an increase in the observed mobility:

It was shown that this relationship holds for a large range of field strengths.[5]

AC conductivity

The real and imaginary parts of the AC conductivity for a large range of disordered semiconductors has the following form:[6]

where C is a constant and s is usually smaller than unity.[4]

Ionic conduction

Similar to electron conduction, the electrical resistance of thin-film electrolytes depends on the applied electric field, such that when the thickness of the sample is reduced, the conductivity improves due to both the reduced thickness and the field-induced conductivity enhancement. The field dependence of the current density j through an ionic conductor, assuming a random walk model with independent ions under a periodic potential is given by:[7]

where α is the inter-site separation.

Experimental determination of transport mechanisms

Characterization of transport properties requires fabricating a device and measuring its current-voltage characteristics. Devices for transport studies are typically fabricated by thin film deposition or break junctions. The dominant transport mechanism in a measured device can be determined by differential conductance analysis. In the differential form, the transport mechanism can be distinguished based on the voltage and temperature dependence of the current through the device.[8]

Electronic transport mechanisms[8]
Transport mechanism Effect of electric field Functional form Differential form
Fowler-Nordheim tunneling (field emission)a
Thermionic emissionb Lowers barrier height
Arrhenius equationc
Poole–Frenkel hopping Assists thermal ionization of trapped charges
Thermally-assisted tunnelingd
^a is the measured current, is the applied voltage, is the effective contact area, is Planck's constant, is the barrier height, is the applied electric field, is the effective mass.
^b is Richardson's constant, is the temperature, is Boltzmann's constant, and are the vacuum the relative permittivity, respectively.
^c is the activation energy.
^d is an elliptical function; is a function of , the applied field and the barrier height.

It is common to express the mobility as a product of two terms, a field-independent term and a field-dependent term:

where φ is the activation energy and β is model-dependent. For Poole–Frenkel hopping, for example,

Tunneling and thermionic emission are typically observed when the barrier height is low. Thermally-assisted tunneling is a "hybrid" mechanism that attempts to describe a range of simultaneous behaviours, from tunneling to thermionic emission.[9][10]

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Bof Bufon, Carlos C.; Vervacke, Céline; Thurmer, Dominic J.; Fronk, Michael; Salvan, Georgeta; Lindner, Susi; Knupfer, Martin; Zahn, Dietrich R. T.; Schmidt, Oliver G. (2014). "Determination of the Charge Transport Mechanisms in Ultrathin Copper Phthalocyanine Vertical Heterojunctions". The Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 118 (14): 7272–7279. ISSN 1932-7447. doi:10.1021/jp409617r.
  2. Gill, W. D. (1972). "Drift mobilities in amorphous charge‐transfer complexes of trinitrofluorenone and poly‐n‐vinylcarbazole". Journal of Applied Physics. 43 (12): 5033–5040. ISSN 0021-8979. doi:10.1063/1.1661065.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Sergei Baranovski; Oleg Rubel (14 August 2006). "Description of Charge Transport in Disordered Organic Materials". In Sergei Baranovski. Charge Transport in Disordered Solids with Applications in Electronics. Materials for Electronic & Optoelectronic Applications. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 221–266. ISBN 978-0-470-09505-8.
  4. 1 2 3 Sergei Baranovski; Oleg Rubel (14 August 2006). "Description of Charge Transport in Amorphous Semiconductors". In Sergei Baranovski. Charge Transport in Disordered Solids with Applications in Electronics. Materials for Electronic & Optoelectronic Applications. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 49–96. ISBN 978-0-470-09505-8.
  5. Van der Auweraer, Mark; De Schryver, Frans C.; Borsenberger, Paul M.; Bässler, Heinz (1994). "Disorder in Charge Transport in doped polymers". Advanced Materials. 6 (3): 199–213. ISSN 0935-9648. doi:10.1002/adma.19940060304.
  6. Igor Zvyagin (14 August 2006). "AC Hopping Transport in Disordered Materials". In Sergei Baranovski. Charge Transport in Disordered Solids with Applications in Electronics. Materials for Electronic & Optoelectronic Applications. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 339–377. ISBN 978-0-470-09505-8.
  7. Bernhard Roling (14 August 2006). "Mechanisms of Ion Transport in Amorphous and Nanostructured Materials". In Sergei Baranovski. Charge Transport in Disordered Solids with Applications in Electronics. Materials for Electronic & Optoelectronic Applications. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 379–401. ISBN 978-0-470-09505-8.
  8. 1 2 Conklin, David; Nanayakkara, Sanjini; Park, Tae-Hong; Lagadec, Marie F.; Stecher, Joshua T.; Therien, Michael J.; Bonnell, Dawn A. (2012). "Electronic Transport in Porphyrin Supermolecule-Gold Nanoparticle Assemblies". Nano Letters. 12 (5): 2414–2419. ISSN 1530-6984. doi:10.1021/nl300400a.
  9. Murphy, E. L.; Good, R. H. (1956). "Thermionic Emission, Field Emission, and the Transition Region". Physical Review. 102 (6): 1464–1473. ISSN 0031-899X. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.102.1464.
  10. Polanco, J. I.; Roberts, G. G. (1972). "Thermally assisted tunnelling in dielectric films (II)". Physica Status Solidi (a). 13 (2): 603–606. ISSN 0031-8965. doi:10.1002/pssa.2210130231.
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