2008
DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.78.075437
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Sequential tunneling and inelastic cotunneling in nanoparticle arrays

Abstract: We investigate transport in weakly coupled metal nanoparticle arrays, focusing on the regime where tunneling is competing with strong single electron charging effects. This competition gives rise to an interplay between two types of charge transport. In sequential tunneling, transport is dominated by independent electron hops from a particle to its nearest neighbor along the current path. In inelastic cotunneling, transport is dominated by cooperative multielectron hops that each go to the nearest neighbor but… Show more

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Cited by 79 publications
(138 citation statements)
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“…The upward curvature drops as the temperature rises but their shape are reminiscent of that already observed in monolayer of granular systems showing inelastic cotunneling mechanism. 3 The curves are fit to the data at T = 1.5 K obtained by power law dependence I ∝ V β with β between 1.5 and 3.5. Following the cotunneling model, the exponent β should be equal to the number of junctions between the electrodes that, in our case, results to be of the order of 10 4 .…”
Section: Metal and Insulating Regimementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The upward curvature drops as the temperature rises but their shape are reminiscent of that already observed in monolayer of granular systems showing inelastic cotunneling mechanism. 3 The curves are fit to the data at T = 1.5 K obtained by power law dependence I ∝ V β with β between 1.5 and 3.5. Following the cotunneling model, the exponent β should be equal to the number of junctions between the electrodes that, in our case, results to be of the order of 10 4 .…”
Section: Metal and Insulating Regimementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For low external fields, a tunneling process can be established and the electrical current flows through the granular system by sequential tunneling or cotunneling. 3 In sequential tunneling each electron hops between two adjacent grains as in a separate quantum event until the opposite electrode is reached; in cotunneling, the electrons tunnel between the two electrodes passing through all the grains in between as in a single tunnel event. Whichever the mechanism responsible for the conduction in the insulating regime, it is well established experimentally that the electrical resistance in granular systems diverges as T → 0 following the R = R N e (T 0 /T ) 1/2 law, where R N is the resistance at a given temperature and the value of the parameter T 0 depends on the theoretical model adopted.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…(1) is a result of inelastic cotunneling processes, which govern the electron transport. The essence of these processes is that an electron tunnels via virtual states in intermediate grains thus bypassing the huge Coulomb barrier [2,4,[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]. This can be visualized as coherent superposition of two events: tunneling of an electron into a granule and the simultaneous escape of another electron from the same granule.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Specifically, in inelastic multiple cotunneling, the electrical current depends on the transmission probability of the interconnecting molecules raised to a power N 2, with N related to the typical number of hops in the multiple cotunneling process. 9,10 Thus far, the resulting cotunneling current has only been calculated for systems in which the transmission probability is independent of energy. This assumption does not generally apply to molecules bridging between neighboring nanoparticles, however, as molecular transmission functions can be strongly energy-dependent.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%