Tunneling conductivity in composites of attractive colloids
B. Nigro, C. Grimaldi, M. A. Miller, P. Ryser, T. Schilling

TL;DR
This paper investigates how tunneling conductivity in nanocomposites with attractive colloids depends on particle interactions and concentration, revealing that conductivity behavior is governed by different parameters at low and high filler contents.
Contribution
It introduces a model considering attractive square well potentials and tunneling conductances, showing that conductivity depends on attraction parameters beyond percolation theory predictions.
Findings
Conductivity at low filler content is governed by particle stickiness.
At higher concentrations, conductivity depends mainly on potential well depth.
Varying potential parameters can cause large conductivity changes at intermediate and high filler contents.
Abstract
In conductor-insulator nanocomposites in which conducting fillers are dispersed in an insulating matrix the electrical connectedness is established by interparticle tunneling or hopping processes. These systems are intrinsically non-percolative and a coherent description of the functional dependence of the conductivity on the filler properties, and in particular of the conductor-insulator transition, requires going beyond the usual continuum percolation approach by relaxing the constraint of a fixed connectivity distance. In this article we consider dispersions of conducting spherical particles which are connected to all others by tunneling conductances and which are subjected to an effective attractive square well potential. We show that the conductor-insulator transition at low contents of the conducting fillers does not determine the behavior of at larger…
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