2004
DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/16/3/013
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Observation of the anisotropic hopping conductivity of p-CdSb in a magnetic field

Abstract: The resistivity of the anisotropic semiconductor p-CdSb is investigated in a wide temperature range of T = 1.9-300 K in pulsed magnetic fields up to B = 25 T. Two not intentionally doped single-crystalline samples oriented along the crystallographic axes [100] (no. 1) and [010] (no. 2) are used for measurements of the resistivity, ρ, in transversal magnetic field configuration. Below T ≈ 8 K the resistivity follows the laws ln ρ ∼ C B 2 for B < B c and ln ρ ∼ S B 7/12 for B > B c , where the coefficients C and… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…As follows from the percolation model of the hopping charge transfer over the nearest sites (or NNH conductivity) [10], the positive MR is connected to shrinkage of the impurity wave functions in the direction perpendicular to B and is given in strong magnetic field by the expression [6,10] ln…”
Section: Analysis Of the Results And Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As follows from the percolation model of the hopping charge transfer over the nearest sites (or NNH conductivity) [10], the positive MR is connected to shrinkage of the impurity wave functions in the direction perpendicular to B and is given in strong magnetic field by the expression [6,10] ln…”
Section: Analysis Of the Results And Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The anisotropic quantum transport revealed by Shubnikov-de Haas effect [4] and negative magnetoresistance [5] are observed on the metallic side of the MIT, whereas anisotropic hopping conductivity is realized on the insulating side of the MIT [6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This characteristic results in a high thermoelectric power and -in conjunction with the orthorhombic symmetry -strongly anisotropic transport properties . 8,9 CdSb is an interesting material for thermoelectric sensor applications. [10][11][12] With respect to the well understood tetrahedrally bonded III-V and II-VI systems, II-V semiconductors pose some peculiarity into their bonding properties.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the dependence of ln ρ (B) on temperature is different for each hopping regime. The law ln[ρ(B)/ρ(0)] j = C j B 2 is expected for the NNH conductivity, where C j = t e 2 a p j 2 /(ħ 2 N A ) does not depend on T, t = 0.036, e is the elementary charge, a is the mean localization radius, p j = [m j 2 /(m k m l )] 1/6 is the anisotropy coefficient (m j , m k and m l are the components of the hole effective mass), with j, k, l = 1, 2 , 3 (j ≠ k ≠ l) and j = 3, 1, 2 for # 1, # 2 and # 3, respectively, corresponding to the direction of the magnetic field along the [001], [100] and [010] axes, respectively, ħ is the Planck constant and N A is the acceptor concentration [3,4]. For the Mott-VRH conductivity in low fields one gets an expression similar to that of the NNH conductivity, but with C j replaced by A j (M)…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%