Magnetoresistance of TTF-TCNQ

1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (17) ◽  
pp. 1593-1605 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Tiedje ◽  
J. F. Carolan ◽  
A. J. Berlinsky ◽  
L. Weiler

The magnetoresistance of TTF-TCNQ has been measured for currents along the crystallographic b axis in static fields of 50 kOe for temperatures between 17 and 98 K. For [Formula: see text] the magnetoresistance Δρ/ρ = [ρ(50 kOe) − ρ(0)]/ρ(0) is less than 0.1% in magnitude. There is a peak of about −1.4% at 52.8 ± 0.2 K. Below 50 K, Δρ/ρ is small and negative and is described reasonably well by the formula Δρ/ρ = −(1/2)(μBH/kT)2. At all temperatures Δρ/ρ was found to be approximately independent of the orientation of the applied field with respect to the current. The high temperature behavior is consistent with that expected for a metal in the short scattering time limit [Formula: see text]. We attribute the peak at 52.8 K to the suppression of the metal–insulator transition by the magnetic field, and we show why such behavior would be expected for a Peierls transition. In the low temperature region the crystal acts like a small gap semiconductor for which the –T−2 dependence of Δρ/ρ is easily understood. We note that the peak in the magnetoresistance at 52.8 K strongly suggests that the electronic energy gap goes to zero at this temperature. One is then led to conclude that the decrease in the conductivity between 58 and 53 K is due to resistive fluctuations above the metal–insulator transition.

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre Jaoui ◽  
Gabriel Seyfarth ◽  
Carl Willem Rischau ◽  
Steffen Wiedmann ◽  
Siham Benhabib ◽  
...  

AbstractLightly doped III–V semiconductor InAs is a dilute metal, which can be pushed beyond its extreme quantum limit upon the application of a modest magnetic field. In this regime, a Mott-Anderson metal–insulator transition, triggered by the magnetic field, leads to a depletion of carrier concentration by more than one order of magnitude. Here, we show that this transition is accompanied by a 200-fold enhancement of the Seebeck coefficient, which becomes as large as 11.3 mV K−1$$\approx 130\frac{{k}_{B}}{e}$$ ≈ 130 k B e at T = 8 K and B = 29 T. We find that the magnitude of this signal depends on sample dimensions and conclude that it is caused by phonon drag, resulting from a large difference between the scattering time of phonons (which are almost ballistic) and electrons (which are almost localized in the insulating state). Our results reveal a path to distinguish between possible sources of large thermoelectric response in other low-density systems pushed beyond the quantum limit.


2020 ◽  
Vol 102 (19) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitaly Gorelov ◽  
David M. Ceperley ◽  
Markus Holzmann ◽  
Carlo Pierleoni

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