At low energy scales charge transport in the insulating Si:P is dominated by activated hopping between the localized donor electron states. Thus, theoretical models for a disordered system with electron-electron interaction are appropriate to interpret the electric conductivity spectra.With a newly developed technique we have measured the complex broadband microwave conductivity of Si:P from 100 MHz to 5 GHz in a broad range of phosphorus concentration n/nc from 0.56 to 0.95 relative to the critical value nc = 3.5 × 1018 cm-3 corresponding to the metal-insulator transition driven by doping. At our base temperature of T = 1.1 K the samples are in the zero-phonon regime where they show a super-linear frequency dependence of the conductivity indicating the influence of the Coulomb gap in the density of the impurity states. At higher doping n → n c, an abrupt drop in the conductivity power law σ 1(ω) ∼ ωα is observed. The dielectric function ε1 increases upon doping following a power law in (1 - n/nc). Dynamic response at elevated temperatures has also been investigated. © 2008 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.
CITATION STYLE
Ritz, E., & Dressel, M. (2008). Influence of electronic correlations on the frequency-dependent hopping transport in Si:P. In Physica Status Solidi (C) Current Topics in Solid State Physics (Vol. 5, pp. 703–707). https://doi.org/10.1002/pssc.200777583
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