On the electron transport in conducting polymer nanofibers
Natalya A. Zimbovskaya

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical analysis of electron transport in conducting polymer nanofibers, emphasizing resonance tunneling mechanisms and the influence of temperature, revealing unique transport behaviors distinct from other conduction processes.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum theoretical model for intergrain electron tunneling in conducting polymer nanofibers, highlighting the dominant role of resonance tunneling and temperature effects on transport properties.
Findings
Resonance tunneling can dominate electron transport in polymer nanofibers.
Temperature influences tunneling by modifying intermediate states and transmission peaks.
Phonon baths can suppress and generate new tunneling states under certain conditions.
Abstract
Recent advances in synthesis and electrical characterization of nanofibers and nanotubes made out of various conjugated polymers attract attention of the research community to studies of transport properties of these materials. In this work we present a theoretical analysis of electron transport in polymer nanofibers assuming them to be in conducting state. We treat a conducting polymer as a network of metallic-like grains embedded in poorly conducting environment, which consists of randomly distributed polymeric chains. We analyze the contribution from intergrain electron resonance tunneling via intermediate states localized on the polymeric chains between the grains. Correspondingly, we apply the quantum theory of conduction in mesoscopic systems to analyze this transport mechanism. We show that the contribution of resonance electron tunneling to the intergrain electron transport may…
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Taxonomy
TopicsConducting polymers and applications · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Organic Electronics and Photovoltaics
