Temperature-dependent Drude transport in a two-dimensional electron gas
Abstract
We consider transport of dilute two-dimensional electrons, with temperature between Fermi and Debye temperatures. In this regime, electrons form a nondegenerate plasma with mobility limited by potential disorder. Different kinds of impurities contribute unique signatures to the resulting temperature-dependent Drude conductivity, via energy-dependent scattering. This opens up a way to characterize sample disorder composition. In particular, neutral impurities cause a slow decrease in conductivity with temperature, whereas charged impurities result in conductivity growing as a square root of temperature. This observation serves as a precaution for literally interpreting metallic or insulating conductivity dependence, as both can be found in a classical metallic system.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0810.4198,
title = {Temperature-dependent Drude transport in a two-dimensional electron gas},
author = {D. S. Novikov},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.4198},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
5 pages, 2 figures, published version