Conductivity of two-dimensional small gap semiconductors and topological insulators in strong Coulomb disorder
Yi Huang, Brian Skinner, B. I. Shklovskii

TL;DR
This paper investigates how strong Coulomb disorder affects the conductivity of two-dimensional small gap semiconductors and topological insulators, revealing multiple conduction regimes and disorder-driven insulator-metal transitions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the temperature-dependent conductivity and identifies the regimes where activation energy reflects the band gap versus disorder-induced hopping.
Findings
Conductivity exhibits three regimes with distinct conduction mechanisms.
Activation energy collapses near a critical impurity concentration.
Disorder induces a re-entrant insulator-metal-insulator transition.
Abstract
We are honored to dedicate this article to Emmanuel Rashba on the occasion of his 95 birthday. In the ideal disorder-free situation, a two-dimensional band gap insulator has an activation energy for conductivity equal to half the band gap, . But transport experiments usually exhibit a much smaller activation energy at low temperature, and the relation between this activation energy and is unclear. Here we consider the temperature-dependent conductivity of a two-dimensional narrow gap semiconductor on a substrate containing Coulomb impurities, mostly focusing on the case when amplitude of the random potential . We show that the conductivity generically exhibits three regimes and only the highest temperature regime exhibits an activation energy that reflects the band gap. At lower temperatures, the conduction proceeds through nearest-neighbor or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Graphene research and applications · Diamond and Carbon-based Materials Research
