AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C
Abstract Nano-granular metals are materials that fall into the general class of granular electronic systems in which the interplay of electronic correlations, disorder and finite size effects can be studied. The charge transport in nano-granular metals is dominated by thermally-assisted, sequential...
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2021-07-01
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Series: | Scientific Reports |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94575-w |
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doaj-39aebe0cb73142b293a2109056f7d2072021-08-01T11:25:05ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-07-011111910.1038/s41598-021-94575-wAC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/CMarc Hanefeld0Peter Gruszka1Michael Huth2Physikalisches Institut, Goethe UniversitätPhysikalisches Institut, Goethe UniversitätPhysikalisches Institut, Goethe UniversitätAbstract Nano-granular metals are materials that fall into the general class of granular electronic systems in which the interplay of electronic correlations, disorder and finite size effects can be studied. The charge transport in nano-granular metals is dominated by thermally-assisted, sequential and correlated tunneling over a temperature-dependent number of metallic grains. Here we study the frequency-dependent conductivity (AC conductivity) of nano-granular Platinum with Pt nano-grains embedded into amorphous carbon (C). We focus on the transport regime on the insulating side of the insulator metal transition reflected by a set of samples covering a range of tunnel-coupling strengths. In this transport regime polarization contributions to the AC conductivity are small and correlation effects in the transport of free charges are expected to be particularly pronounced. We find a universal behavior in the frequency dependence that can be traced back to the temperature-dependent zero-frequency conductivity (DC conductivity) of Pt/C within a simple lumped-circuit analysis. Our results are in contradistinction to previous work on nano-granular Pd/ $$\hbox {ZrO}_2$$ ZrO 2 in the very weak coupling regime where polarization contributions to the AC conductivity dominated. We describe possible future applications of nano-granular metals in proximity impedance spectroscopy of dielectric materials.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94575-w |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Marc Hanefeld Peter Gruszka Michael Huth |
spellingShingle |
Marc Hanefeld Peter Gruszka Michael Huth AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C Scientific Reports |
author_facet |
Marc Hanefeld Peter Gruszka Michael Huth |
author_sort |
Marc Hanefeld |
title |
AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C |
title_short |
AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C |
title_full |
AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C |
title_fullStr |
AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C |
title_full_unstemmed |
AC conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular Pt/C |
title_sort |
ac conductivity and correlation effects in nano-granular pt/c |
publisher |
Nature Publishing Group |
series |
Scientific Reports |
issn |
2045-2322 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
Abstract Nano-granular metals are materials that fall into the general class of granular electronic systems in which the interplay of electronic correlations, disorder and finite size effects can be studied. The charge transport in nano-granular metals is dominated by thermally-assisted, sequential and correlated tunneling over a temperature-dependent number of metallic grains. Here we study the frequency-dependent conductivity (AC conductivity) of nano-granular Platinum with Pt nano-grains embedded into amorphous carbon (C). We focus on the transport regime on the insulating side of the insulator metal transition reflected by a set of samples covering a range of tunnel-coupling strengths. In this transport regime polarization contributions to the AC conductivity are small and correlation effects in the transport of free charges are expected to be particularly pronounced. We find a universal behavior in the frequency dependence that can be traced back to the temperature-dependent zero-frequency conductivity (DC conductivity) of Pt/C within a simple lumped-circuit analysis. Our results are in contradistinction to previous work on nano-granular Pd/ $$\hbox {ZrO}_2$$ ZrO 2 in the very weak coupling regime where polarization contributions to the AC conductivity dominated. We describe possible future applications of nano-granular metals in proximity impedance spectroscopy of dielectric materials. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94575-w |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT marchanefeld acconductivityandcorrelationeffectsinnanogranularptc AT petergruszka acconductivityandcorrelationeffectsinnanogranularptc AT michaelhuth acconductivityandcorrelationeffectsinnanogranularptc |
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