308 research outputs found
Ageing in granular aluminium insulating thin films
We present a new set of electrical field effect measurements on granular
aluminium insulating thin films. We have explored how the conductance
relaxations induced by gate voltage changes depend on the age of the system,
namely the time elapsed since its quench at low temperature. A clear age
dependence of the relaxations is seen, qualitatively similar to ageing effects
seen in other well studied glassy systems such as spin glasses or polymers. We
explain how our results differ from the previous ones obtained with different
protocols in indium oxide and granular aluminium thin films. Our experimental
findings bring new information on the dynamics of the system and put new
constraints on the theoretical models that may explain slow conductance
relaxations in disordered insulators.Comment: 4 pages, 13th Transport in interacting disordered systems (TIDS13)
conference, 31.08.2009 - 05.09.2009, Rackeve, Hungar
Conductivity fluctuations in polymer's networks
Polymer's network is treated as an anisotropic fractal with fractional
dimensionality D = 1 + \epsilon close to one. Percolation model on such a
fractal is studied. Using the real space renormalization group approach of
Migdal and Kadanoff we find threshold value and all the critical exponents to
be strongly nonanalytic functions of \epsilon, e.g. the critical exponent of
the conductivity was obtained to be \epsilon^{-2}\exp(-1-1/\epsilon). The main
part of the finite size conductivities distribution function at the threshold
was found to be universal if expressed in terms of the fluctuating variable,
which is proportional to the large power of the conductivity, but with
dimensionally-dependent low-conductivity cut-off. Its reduced central momenta
are of the order of \exp(-1/\epsilon) up to the very high order.Comment: 7 pages, one eps figure, uses epsf style, to be published in Proc. of
LEES-97 (Physica B
Slow relaxation of magnetoresistance in doped p -GaAs/AlGaAs layers with partially filled upper Hubbard band
We observed slow relaxation of magnetoresistance in quantum well structures
GaAs-AlGaAs with a selective doping of both wells and barrier regions which
allowed partial filling of the upper Hubbard band. Such a behavior is explained
as related to magnetic-field driven redistribution of the carriers between
sites with different occupation numbers due to spin correlation on the doubly
occupied centers. This redistribution, in its turn, leads to slow
multi-particle relaxations in the Coulomb glass formed by the charged centers.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Fraternal Dialogue
A survey of the possibilities and challenges of Christian-Jewish dialogue. Translated from the German by Aimee C. Bourneuf, R.S.C.]
Heterogeneous dynamics of the three dimensional Coulomb glass out of equilibrium
The non-equilibrium relaxational properties of a three dimensional Coulomb
glass model are investigated by kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. Our results
suggest a transition from stationary to non-stationary dynamics at the
equilibrium glass transition temperature of the system. Below the transition
the dynamic correlation functions loose time translation invariance and
electron diffusion is anomalous. Two groups of carriers can be identified at
each time scale, electrons whose motion is diffusive within a selected time
window and electrons that during the same time interval remain confined in
small regions in space. During the relaxation that follows a temperature quench
an exchange of electrons between these two groups takes place and the
non-equilibrium excess of diffusive electrons initially present decreases
logarithmically with time as the system relaxes. This bimodal dynamical
heterogeneity persists at higher temperatures when time translation invariance
is restored and electron diffusion is normal. The occupancy of the two
dynamical modes is then stationary and its temperature dependence reflects a
crossover between a low-temperature regime with a high concentration of
electrons forming fluctuating dipoles and a high-temperature regime in which
the concentration of diffusive electrons is high.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
On the structure of the energy distribution function in the hopping regime
The impact of the dispersion of the transport coefficients on the structure
of the energy distribution function for charge carriers far from equilibrium
has been investigated in effective-medium approximation for model densities of
states. The investigations show that two regimes can be observed in energy
relaxation processes. Below a characteristic temperature the structure of the
energy distribution function is determined by the dispersion of the transport
coefficients. Thermal energy diffusion is irrelevant in this regime. Above the
characteristic temperature the structure of the energy distribution function is
determined by energy diffusion. The characteristic temperature depends on the
degree of disorder and increases with increasing disorder. Explicit expressions
for the energy distribution function in both regimes are derived for a constant
and an exponential density of states.Comment: 16 page
Manifestation of ageing in the low temperature conductance of disordered insulators
We are interested in the out of equilibrium phenomena observed in the
electrical conductance of disordered insulators at low temperature, which may
be signatures of the electron coulomb glass state. The present work is devoted
to the occurrence of ageing, a benchmark phenomenon for the glassy state. It is
the fact that the dynamical properties of a glass depend on its age, i.e. on
the time elapsed since it was quench-cooled. We first critically analyse
previous studies on disordered insulators and question their interpretation in
terms of ageing. We then present new measurements on insulating granular
aluminium thin films which demonstrate that the dynamics is indeed age
dependent. We also show that the results of different relaxation protocols are
related by a superposition principle. The implications of our findings for the
mechanism of the conductance slow relaxations are then discussed
History-dependent relaxation and the energy scale of correlation in the Electron-Glass
We present an experimental study of the energy-relaxation in
Anderson-insulating indium-oxide films excited far from equilibrium. In
particular, we focus on the effects of history on the relaxation of the excess
conductance dG. The natural relaxation law of dG is logarithmic, namely
dG=-log(t). This may be observed over more than five decades following, for
example, cool-quenching the sample from high temperatures. On the other hand,
when the system is excited from a state S_{o} in which it has not fully reached
equilibrium to a state S_{n}, the ensuing relaxation law is logarithmic only
over time t shorter than the time t_{w} it spent in S_{o}. For times t>t_{w}
dG(t) show systematic deviation from the logarithmic dependence. It was
previously shown that when the energy imparted to the system in the excitation
process is small, this leads to dG=P(t/t_{w}) (simple-aging). Here we test the
conjecture that `simple-aging' is related to a symmetry in the relaxation
dynamics in S_{o} and S_{n}. This is done by using a new experimental procedure
that is more sensitive to deviations in the relaxation dynamics. It is shown
that simple-aging may still be obeyed (albeit with a modified P(t/t_{w})) even
when the symmetry of relaxation in S_{o} and S_{n} is perturbed by a certain
degree. The implications of these findings to the question of aging, and the
energy scale associated with correlations are discussed
Monte-Carlo Simulations of the Dynamical Behavior of the Coulomb Glass
We study the dynamical behavior of disordered many-particle systems with
long-range Coulomb interactions by means of damage-spreading simulations. In
this type of Monte-Carlo simulations one investigates the time evolution of the
damage, i.e. the difference of the occupation numbers of two systems, subjected
to the same thermal noise. We analyze the dependence of the damage on
temperature and disorder strength. For zero disorder the spreading transition
coincides with the equilibrium phase transition, whereas for finite disorder,
we find evidence for a dynamical phase transition well below the transition
temperature of the pure system.Comment: 10 pages RevTeX, 8 Postscript figure
Electronic transport in films of colloidal CdSe nanocrystals
We present results for electronic transport measurements on large
three-dimensional arrays of CdSe nanocrystals. In response to a step in the
applied voltage, we observe a power-law decay of the current over five orders
of magnitude in time. Furthermore, we observe no steady-state dark current for
fields up to 10^6 V/cm and times as long as 2x10^4 seconds. Although the
power-law form of the decay is quite general, there are quantitative variations
with temperature, applied field, sample history, and the material parameters of
the array. Despite evidence that the charge injected into the film during the
measurement causes the decay of current, we find field-scaling of the current
at all times. The observation of extremely long-lived current transients
suggests the importance of long-range Coulomb interactions between charges on
different nanocrystals.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
- …
