Tuning the electrical conductivity of Pt-containing granular metals by postgrowth electron irradiation
F. Porrati, R. Sachser, C. H. Schwalb, A. S. Frangakis, M. Huth

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how postgrowth electron irradiation can tune the electrical conductivity of Pt-containing granular metals by modifying their microstructure and tunneling properties, enabling control from insulating to metallic states.
Contribution
It introduces a method to control electrical conductivity in granular metals through electron beam irradiation, revealing microstructural and electronic changes.
Findings
Electrical conductivity follows variable-range hopping in as-grown samples.
Irradiation induces a transition from insulator to metal.
Microstructural analysis shows increased crystallite size and matrix graphitization with irradiation.
Abstract
We have fabricated Pt-containing granular metals by focused electron beam induced deposition from the precursor gas. The granular metals are made of platinum nanocrystallites embedded in a carbonaceous matrix. We have exposed the as-grown nanocomposites to low energy electron beam irradiation and we have measured the electrical conductivity as a function of the irradiation dose. Postgrowth electron beam irradiation transforms the matrix microstructure and thus the strength of the tunneling coupling between Pt nanocrystallites. For as-grown samples (weak tunnel coupling regime) we find that the temperature dependence of the electrical conductivity follows the stretched exponential behavior characteristic of the correlated variable-range hopping transport regime. For briefly irradiated samples (strong tunnel coupling regime) the electrical conductivity is tuned…
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