Bulk-Induced Correlated Mobility-Number Density Fluctuations in Molecular Beam Epitaxy Grown Topological Insulators
ORAL
Abstract
We present a detailed study of 1/f noise in large-area molecular beam epitaxy grown thin (~10 nm) films of the topological insulator (Bi,Sb)2Te3 on strontium titanate (STO) substrate as a function of temperature (T), gate voltage and magnetic field [1]. The temperature dependence of 1/f noise displays a sharp cusp at T = 50 K which can be attributed to generation-recombination processes in the impurity band in the bulk band gap. The gate voltage dependence of noise reveals that both bulk and surface states are influenced by correlated mobility-number density fluctuations caused by defects in the bulk with a density Dit = 3.2×1017 cm-2eV-1. In the presence of magnetic field, the 1/f noise follows a parabolic dependence which is qualitatively similar to mobility and charge density fluctuation noise in nondegenerate semiconductors. Our studies reveal that even in thin films of (Bi,Sb)2Te3 with thickness as low as 10 nm, the bulk defects are the dominant source of noise. (1) S. Islam et al. APL 111, 062107 (2017)
*AG, SB and SI acknowledge support from DST, India, AR and NS from The Pennsylvania State University Two-Dimensional Crystal Consortium Materials Innovation Platform (2DCC-MIP) supported by NSF cooperative agreement DMR-1539916
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Presenters
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Saurav Islam
- Physics, Indian Institute of Science