Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts

Striking non-linear conductivity effects induced by surprisingly low electric-fields in charge-ordered oxides, were reported variously as dielectric breakdown, charge-order collapse, depinning of charge-density-waves or other electronic effects. Our pulsed and d.c. I-V measurements on resistive oxid...

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Main Authors: Reisner G. M., Patlagan L., Genossar J., Fisher B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2013-01-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20134015009
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spelling doaj-bc25042af5014c40b63f765b7df4ece12021-08-02T12:28:59ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2013-01-01401500910.1051/epjconf/20134015009Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifactsReisner G. M.Patlagan L.Genossar J.Fisher B.Striking non-linear conductivity effects induced by surprisingly low electric-fields in charge-ordered oxides, were reported variously as dielectric breakdown, charge-order collapse, depinning of charge-density-waves or other electronic effects. Our pulsed and d.c. I-V measurements on resistive oxides show that non-linear conductivity of electronic origin at low electric-fields is a rare phenomenon. In the majority of cases we detected no deviations from linearity in pulsed I-V characteristics under fields up to E ~ 500 V/cm. Current-controlled negative-differential-resistance (NDR) and hysteresis were found in d.c. measurements at fields that decrease with increasing temperatures, a behavior typical of Joule heating in materials with negative temperature coefficient of resistivity. For the d.c. I-V characteristics of our samples exhibiting NDR, we found a rather unexpected correlation between ρ(Em) - the resistivity at maximum field (at the onset of NDR) and ρ(E=0) – the ohmic resistivity. The data points for ρ(Em) versus ρ(E=0) obtained from such characteristics of 13 samples (8 manganites, 4 nickelates and one multiferroic) at various ambient temperatures, plotted together on a log-log scale, follow closely a linear dependence with slope one that spans more than five orders of magnitude. This dependence is reproduced by several simple models.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20134015009
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Reisner G. M.
Patlagan L.
Genossar J.
Fisher B.
spellingShingle Reisner G. M.
Patlagan L.
Genossar J.
Fisher B.
Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Reisner G. M.
Patlagan L.
Genossar J.
Fisher B.
author_sort Reisner G. M.
title Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
title_short Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
title_full Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
title_fullStr Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
title_full_unstemmed Electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
title_sort electric-field effects in resistive oxides: facts and artifacts
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Striking non-linear conductivity effects induced by surprisingly low electric-fields in charge-ordered oxides, were reported variously as dielectric breakdown, charge-order collapse, depinning of charge-density-waves or other electronic effects. Our pulsed and d.c. I-V measurements on resistive oxides show that non-linear conductivity of electronic origin at low electric-fields is a rare phenomenon. In the majority of cases we detected no deviations from linearity in pulsed I-V characteristics under fields up to E ~ 500 V/cm. Current-controlled negative-differential-resistance (NDR) and hysteresis were found in d.c. measurements at fields that decrease with increasing temperatures, a behavior typical of Joule heating in materials with negative temperature coefficient of resistivity. For the d.c. I-V characteristics of our samples exhibiting NDR, we found a rather unexpected correlation between ρ(Em) - the resistivity at maximum field (at the onset of NDR) and ρ(E=0) – the ohmic resistivity. The data points for ρ(Em) versus ρ(E=0) obtained from such characteristics of 13 samples (8 manganites, 4 nickelates and one multiferroic) at various ambient temperatures, plotted together on a log-log scale, follow closely a linear dependence with slope one that spans more than five orders of magnitude. This dependence is reproduced by several simple models.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20134015009
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