The conductivity σ, quantum-based magnetoconductivity Δσ = σ(B) - σ(0), and Hall coefficient R (= µ/σ) of degenerate, homoepitaxial, (010) Si-doped β-GaO, have been measured over a temperature range T = 9-320 K and magnetic field range B = 0-10 kG. With ten atoms in the unit cell, the normal-mode phonon structure of β-GaO is very complex, with optical-phonon energies ranging from kT ~ 20-100 meV. For heavily doped samples, the phonon spectrum is further modified by doping disorder. We explore the possibility of developing a single function T(T) that can be incorporated into both quantum and classical scattering theory such that Δσ vs B, Δσ vs T, and µ vs T are all well fitted. Surprisingly, a relatively simple function, T(T) = 1.6 × 10{1 - exp[-(T + 1)/170]} K, works well for β-GaO without any additional fitting parameters. In contrast, Δσ vs T in degenerate ScN, which has only one optical phonon branch, is well fitted with a constant T = 550 K. These results indicate that quantum conductivity enables an understanding of classical conductivity in disordered, multi-phonon semiconductors.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6362195 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-38419-0 | DOI Listing |
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