Pressure dependent extrinsic effects in InSb
Abstract
Electrical transport properties of n and p-type InSb
in the temperature range 6.2-300K have been studied under
pressures up to 15 kbar using Hall measurements.
The donor gap in n-InSb is found to increase linearly
with pressure, becoming zero at pressures of 8.4 kbar or less.
This is responsible for carrier freeze-out under pressure.
Unexpected behaviour is observed in the donor gap, as it appears
to decrease abruptly at temperatures near 100K as temperature
is lowered. This effect has been investigated and two possible
theories explaining it are examined. Mobility measurements at
low pressure indicate that at temperatures below 40K scattering
processes are dominated by ionized and neutral impurity scattering. At pressures high enough to cause carrier freeze-out the mobility
decreases rapidly with temperature. High electric field measurements
indicate that ionized impurity scattering is the dominant
scattering mechanism in this regime.
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