Study of Electronic Properties of 122 Iron Pnictide Through Structural, Carrier-Doping, and Impurity-Scattering Effects

Study of Electronic Properties of 122 Iron Pnictide Through Structural, Carrier-Doping, and Impurity-Scattering Effects
Author: Tatsuya Kobayashi
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 97
Release: 2017-05-07
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9811044759

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This thesis presents various characteristics of 122-type iron pnictide (FeSC) such as crystal and electronic structure, carrier-doping effect, and impurity-scattering effect, using transport, magnetization, specific heat, single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and optical spectral measurements. Most notably the measurement on the magnetic fluctuation in the material successfully explains already known unusual electronic properties, i.e., superconducting gap symmetry, anisotropy of in-plane resistivity in layered structure, and charge dynamics; and comparing them with those of normal phase, the controversial problems in FeSCs are eventually settled. The thesis provides broad coverage of the physics of FeSCs both in the normal and superconducting phase, and readers therefore benefit from the efficient up-to-date study of FeSCs in this thesis. An additional attraction is the detailed description of the experimental result critical for the controversial problems remaining since the discovery of FeSC in 2008, which helps readers follow up recent developments in superconductor research.

Iron-Based Superconductivity

Iron-Based Superconductivity
Author: Peter D. Johnson
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 452
Release: 2015-01-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3319112546

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This volume presents an in-depth review of experimental and theoretical studies on the newly discovered Fe-based superconductors. Following the Introduction, which places iron-based superconductors in the context of other unconventional superconductors, the book is divided into three sections covering sample growth, experimental characterization, and theoretical understanding. To understand the complex structure-property relationships of these materials, results from a wide range of experimental techniques and theoretical approaches are described that probe the electronic and magnetic properties and offer insight into either itinerant or localized electronic states. The extensive reference lists provide a bridge to further reading. Iron-Based Superconductivity is essential reading for advanced undergraduate and graduate students as well as researchers active in the fields of condensed matter physics and materials science in general, particularly those with an interest in correlated metals, frustrated spin systems, superconductivity, and competing orders.

Charge Dynamics in the Metallic and Superconducting States of the Electron-doped 122-type Iron Arsenides

Charge Dynamics in the Metallic and Superconducting States of the Electron-doped 122-type Iron Arsenides
Author: Zhen Xing
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2018
Genre: Condensed matter
ISBN:

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Understanding charge dynamics and the origin of superconductivity in iron-based materials is one of the most important topics in condensed matter physics. Among different structures of iron-based materials, 122-type iron arsenides are of considerable interest due to their diverse phase diagrams, relatively high superconducting transition temperatures, and the availability of high quality single crystals. In this dissertation, we study temperature and frequency dependence of charge dynamics of the electron-doped 122-type iron arsenides in the metallic and superconducting states using broadband infrared spectroscopy at cryogenic temperatures. We have investigated the charge dynamics and the nature of many-body interactions in metallic La- and Pr- doped CaFe2As2. From the infrared part of the optical conductivity, we discover that the scattering rate of mobile carriers above 200 K exhibits saturation at the Mott-Ioffe-Regel limit of metallic transport. However, the dc resistivity continues to increase with temperature above 200 K due to the loss of Drude spectral weight. The loss of Drude spectral weight with increasing temperature is seen in a wide temperature range in the uncollapsed tetragonal phase, and this spectral weight is recovered at energy scales about one order of magnitude larger than the Fermi energy scale in these semimetals. The phenomena noted above have been observed previously in other correlated metals in which the dominant interactions are electronic in origin. Further evidence of significant electron-electron interactions is obtained from the presence of quadratic temperature and frequency-dependence scattering rate at low temperatures and frequencies in the uncollapsed tetragonal structures of La- and Pr-doped CaFe2As2. We also observe weakening of electronic correlations and a decrease of Drude spectral weight upon the transition to the collapsed tetragonal phase in Pr-doped CaFe2As2. We have measured infrared reflectance spectra of BaFe1.9Pt0.1As2 in the normal and superconducting states. We find that this superconductor has fully gapped Fermi surfaces. Importantly, we observe strong-coupling electron-boson interaction features in the infrared absorption spectra. By using two modeling methods which include strong-coupling effects via the Eliashberg function, we obtain a good quantitative description of the energy gaps and the temperature dependent strong-coupling features. Our experimental data and analysis provide compelling evidence that superconductivity in BaFe1.9Pt0.1As2 is induced by the coupling of electrons to a low energy bosonic mode.

Doping and Density of States Engineering for Organic Thermoelectrics

Doping and Density of States Engineering for Organic Thermoelectrics
Author: Guangzheng Zuo
Publisher: Linköping University Electronic Press
Total Pages: 67
Release: 2018-05-14
Genre:
ISBN: 917685311X

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Thermoelectric materials can turn temperature differences directly into electricity. To use this to harvest e.g. waste heat with an efficiency that approaches the Carnot efficiency requires a figure of merit ZT larger than 1. Compared with their inorganic counterparts, organic thermoelectrics (OTE) have numerous advantages, such as low cost, large-area compatibility, flexibility, material abundance and an inherently low thermal conductivity. Therefore, organic thermoelectrics are considered by many to be a promising candidate material system to be used in lower cost and higher efficiency thermoelectric energy conversion, despite record ZT values for OTE currently lying around 0.25. A complete organic thermoelectric generator (TEG) normally needs both p-type and n-type materials to form its electric circuit. Molecular doping is an effective way to achieve p- and ntype materials using different dopants, and it is necessary to fundamentally understand the doping mechanism. We developed a simple yet quantitative analytical model and compare it with numerical kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to reveal the nature of the doping effect. The results show the formation of a deep tail in the Gaussian density of states (DOS) resulting from the Coulomb potentials of ionized dopants. It is this deep trap tail that negatively influences the charge carrier mobility with increasing doping concentration. The trends in mobilities and conductivities observed from experiments are in good agreement with the modeling results, for a large range of materials and doping concentrations. Having a high power factor PF is necessary for efficient TEG. We demonstrate that the doping method can heavily impact the thermoelectric properties of OTE. In comparison to conventional bulk doping, sequential doping can achieve higher conductivity by preserving the morphology, such that the power factor can improve over 100 times. To achieve TEG with high output power, not only a high PF is needed, but also having a significant active layer thickness is very important. We demonstrate a simple way to fabricate multi-layer devices by sequential doping without significantly sacrificing PF. In addition to the application discussed above, harvesting large amounts of heat at maximum efficiency, organic thermoelectrics may also find use in low-power applications like autonomous sensors where voltage is more important than power. A large output voltage requires a high Seebeck coefficient. We demonstrate that density of states (DOS) engineering is an effective tool to increase the Seebeck coefficient by tailoring the positions of the Fermi energy and the transport energy in n- and p-type doped blends of conjugated polymers and small molecules. In general, morphology heavily impacts the performance of organic electronic devices based on mixtures of two (or more) materials, and organic thermoelectrics are no exception. We experimentally find that the charge and energy transport is distinctly different in well-mixed and phase separated morphologies, which we interpreted in terms of a variable range hopping model. The experimentally observed trends in conductivity and Seebeck coefficient are reproduced by kinetic Monte Carlo simulations in which the morphology is accounted for.

Study of Doping Phenomena in Functional Materials

Study of Doping Phenomena in Functional Materials
Author: Shiny Mathew
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

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The disruptive technologies that are currently emerging across the semi-conductor and electronics industries demand the need for a continual focus on decreasing the size of integrated circuits and renewable energy technology devices. To support this demand requires comprehensive research into understanding the functional properties of materials at an atomic level across a three-dimensional space. These functional properties of materials originate from atomic level properties such as structural, optical and electronic properties, all of which can be modified to optimise the functionality of a material. This is the reason why these atomic level properties were comprehensively studied and reported in this thesis. The introduction of atomic level impurities, via the phenomena of doping, has helped to modify the structural, optical and electronic properties of the materials investigated in this thesis. An insight into the effect and potential that high temperature solid-state doping can bring towards improving the functional properties of three materials namely titania-rutile (single crystal substrates), titanates (powders) and Magnesium Silicon Nitrides MgSiN2 (powders), were gained from the experiments and results reported in this thesis. NB: titanates studied include sodium and potassium hexatitanates, sodium trititanate and caesium titanate. Chapters 3-8 of this thesis were written with a specific focus on the spatial arrangement of dopant atoms (such as B, C, S and N) introduced into photocatalytic titania-rutile and the associated influence it has on bonding, diffusion behaviours as well as structural and electronic properties. The insight gained about these properties of titania-rutile are essential when working on an industrial scale to optimise the performance of renewable energy devices, or to at least match with that of fossil fuels. The choice of anionic dopant introduced into the titania-rutile can help to vary the structural or electronic properties in titania-rutile. Additionally, the unit cell structure that determines the surface and bulk structure of the titania-rutile single crystal substrate that was chosen was observed to also help modify the structural or electronic properties. While the carbon, sulphur and nitrogen anions were predominantly incorporated as surface dopants in titania-rutile, this was not the case with boron anions, which also showed results that were dependent on the orientation of the titania-rutile. Boron incorporation in (110)-titania-rutile led to the formation of a TiBO3 surface layer, approximately 120 nm thick as per XPS data. This TiBO3 layer, as per XRD data, is epitaxially arranged on the rutile (110) surface along the (108), (118) and (018) planes. While this layer was also seen on the rutile (100) surface, no XRD evidence of TiBO3 was found with the rutile (001) surface. As well as observing a shift in the XPS valence band onset, the emergence of new states and O2p orbital mixing was also observed upon anion incorporation into rutile. This study, reporting the structural and electronic effects observed as a result of doping, will be crucial when working with photocatalysts that are widely studied for the water splitting process, used to produce hydrogen, which is a 'clean' energy fuel. The main insight gained from chapter 9 is about making use of the structure of titanate materials (e.g. in open layered and tunnelled titanates) as a scaffold, to control the spatial distribution of any given dopant. This is particularly relevant when the material being investigated is in its powdered form, with no well-defined surface or a bulk. Chapter 9 was written with a specific focus on the effect of doping temperature on the location of the incorporated nitrogen dopant (aka. structural properties), electronic and optical properties in the open layered and tunnelled titanates. While these relationships are widely reported in the literature already, the challenge that this study addresses are about carrying out nitrogen doping at three different temperatures in the same system to ensure the same ammonia flow rate, which is a parameter that is often very challenging to reproduce. This ensures reproducibility of results and therefore reliability in the conclusions. Also, this study is also more comprehensive than that reported in literature the and discusses samples that are fully characterised. The preferential incorporation of nitrogen into the Ti-O-Ti bonds than the Na-O-Ti bonds was observed in the tunnelled titanates, Na2Ti6O13 and K2Ti6O13, and (not in the open layered titanates Na2Ti3O7 and Cs0.68Ti1.825O4), is potentially what led to the creation of Ti3+ defects as observed in their optical absorption spectrum. The resulting Ti 3d and N 1s states observed in the XPS valence band spectrum is potentially what caused the observed band gap narrowing. The modification of the electronic, optical and structural properties of the titanates using nitrogen doping can be used to optimise the functionality of titanates e.g. when it is used as photocatalysts or as battery materials. The main insight gained from chapter 10 is about exploring the alternative material that can replace the expensive aluminium nitride, which is known to be a promising substrate material with ideal thermal conductivity and minimal dissipation of heat. This was done by studying the change in structural properties including associated unit cell volume. The effect of the addition of varying amounts of aluminium as a dopant into the MgSiN2 structure, helped to find that the phase transformation from MgSiN2 to AlN-wurtzite structure is observed between 30% and 50% aluminium dopant introduction, as per XPS and XRD. While the doubling of the magnesium reactant mass led to a single phase MgSiN2, it can potentially affect particle size properties, as hinted by the XRD peak broadening observed. Increasing the aluminium content to above 50% led to unit cell volume contraction as Al3+ ions are smaller than the lattice Mg2+ ions they are substituting. These findings can help gain an understanding of the fundamental chemistry underpinning the development of cheaper, alternative materials for any applications.

Isotropic In-plane Quenched Disorder and Dilution Induce a Robust Nematic State in Electron-doped Pnictides

Isotropic In-plane Quenched Disorder and Dilution Induce a Robust Nematic State in Electron-doped Pnictides
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

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The phase diagram of electron-doped pnictides is studied varying the temperature, electronic density, and isotropic in-plane quenched disorder strength and dilution by means of computational techniques applied to a three-orbital (xz, yz, xy) spin-fermion model with lattice degrees of freedom. In experiments, chemical doping introduces disorder but in theoretical studies the relationship between electronic doping and the randomly located dopants, with their associated quenched disorder, is difficult to address. Moreover, in this publication, the use of computational techniques allows us to study independently the effects of electronic doping, regulated by a global chemical potential, and impurity disorder at randomly selected sites. Surprisingly, our Monte Carlo simulations reveal that the fast reduction with doping of the N eel TN and the structural TS transition temperatures, and the concomitant stabilization of a robust nematic state, is primarily controlled in our model by the magnetic dilution associated with the in-plane isotropic disorder introduced by Fe substitution. In the doping range studied, changes in the Fermi surface produced by electron doping affect only slightly both critical temperatures. Our results also suggest that the specific material-dependent phase diagrams experimentally observed could be explained as a consequence of the variation in disorder profiles introduced by the different dopants. Finally, our findings are also compatible with neutron scattering and scanning tunneling microscopy, unveiling a patchy network of locally magnetically ordered clusters with anisotropic shapes, even though the quenched disorder is locally isotropic. Our study reveals a remarkable and unexpected degree of complexity in pnictides: the fragile tendency to nematicity intrinsic of translational invariant electronic systems needs to be supplemented by quenched disorder and dilution to stabilize the robust nematic phase experimentally found in electron-doped 122 compounds.

Correlation between Structural and Electronic Properties of Co-Evaporated Doped Organic Thin Films

Correlation between Structural and Electronic Properties of Co-Evaporated Doped Organic Thin Films
Author: Daniela Donhauser
Publisher: Cuvillier Verlag
Total Pages: 166
Release: 2014-10-23
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3736948301

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Devices based on organic semiconductors, like organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) or organic solar cells, often comprise electrochemically doped charge transport layers, which improve the performance of these devices. Although very efficient devices can be realized nowadays, a comprehensive description of the physical processes taking place in electrochemically doped thin films is still missing. For instance, it was shown for a variety of different material systems that the doping efficiency, defined as the number of free charge carriers compared to the number of incorporated dopants, often amounts to only a few per cent. The organic semiconductor CBP (4,4’-Bis(N-carbazolyl)-1,1’-biphenyl), doped with the transition metal oxide molybdenum oxide (MoO3), is used here as a model system to investigate the origin for this low doping efficiency. Results from different measurement techniques, like electron tomography, EF-TEM, PES, FTIR-spectroscopy and (temperature- dependent) electrical measurements were correlated to get insight into the origin of the low doping effiencies and to obtain a model to describe charge transport in MoO3-doped CBP films as a function of the doping concentration.

Correlation Effects in the Iron Pnictides

Correlation Effects in the Iron Pnictides
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2009
Genre:
ISBN:

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One of the central questions about the iron pnictides concerns the extent to which their electrons are strongly correlated. Here we address this issue through the phenomenology of the charge transport and dynamics, single-electron excitation spectrum, and magnetic ordering and dynamics. We outline the evidence that the parent compounds, while metallic, have electron interactions that are sufficiently strong to produce incipient Mott physics. In other words, in terms of the strength of electron correlations compared to the kinetic energy, the iron pnictides are closer to intermediately-coupled systems lying at the boundary between itinerancy and localization, such as V2O3 a or Se-doped NiS2, rather than to simple antiferromagnetic metals like Cr. This level of electronic correlations produces a new small parameter for controlled theoretical analyses, namely the fraction of the single-electron spectral weight that lies in the coherent part. Using this expansion parameter, we construct the effective low-energy Hamiltonian and discuss its implications for the magnetic order and magnetic quantum criticality. Finally, this approach sharpens the notion of magnetic frustration for such a metallic system, and brings about a multi band matrix t-J1-J2 model for the carrier-doped iron pnictides.