Image of the phonon spectrum in the 1/f noise of topological insulators
Mihai Mihaila, Silviu Dinulescu, Pericle Varasteanu

TL;DR
This study links 1/f noise peaks in topological insulators to phonon density of states and lattice vibrations, revealing that atomic thermal motions and anharmonicity significantly influence noise characteristics.
Contribution
It demonstrates a direct correlation between 1/f noise features and phonon spectra in topological insulators, highlighting the microscopic origin of noise as atomic thermal motion.
Findings
Noise peaks align with phonon density of states van Hove singularities.
Atomic thermal motions cause the observed noise peaks.
Carrier-phonon coupling strength increases with temperature due to anharmonicity.
Abstract
As reported recently, the 1/f noise intensity in both (Bi,Sb)2Te3 [Islam et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 111, 062107 (2017)] and BiSbTeSe1.6 [Biswas et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 115, 131601 (2019)] features noise peaks which develop at some specific temperatures. We compared this noise structure with either phonon density of states or Raman spectrum of each topological insulator (TI), respectively. In (BiSb)2Te3, the comparison revealed that the noise peaks track the van Hove singularities in the phonon density of states. It resulted that bulk atomic oscillators are responsible for the noise peaks. The most intense noise peak observed in (BiSb)2Te3 at 50 K is attributed to the thermal motion of the Bi atoms. Other less intense noise peaks are assigned to either a single phonon mode or multi-phonon combinations. We found that thermal motions of Bi and Te2 atoms in different symmetry directions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Advanced Thermoelectric Materials and Devices · Thermal properties of materials
