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Emergence of large thermal noise close to a temperature-driven metal-insulator transition

IR@CGCRI: CSIR-Central Glass and Ceramic Research Institute, Kolkata

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Title Emergence of large thermal noise close to a temperature-driven metal-insulator transition
 
Creator Chatterjee, Sudipta
Bisht, Ravindra Singh
Reddy, V Raghavendra
Raychaudhuri, A K
 
Subject Engineering Materials
 
Description We report that close to a Mott transition there is an emergence of large thermal noise (Sth) which occurs concomitantly with large correlated flicker noise (1/ noise) with significant non-Gaussian content. This was observed in films of NdNiO3 (thickness 15 nm) grown on crystalline SrTiO3 substrates with different crystallographic orientations that show a hysteretic transition from a high temperature metallic phase to a low temperature insulating phase in the temperature range 160 to 211 K depending on the substrate orientation and the heating and cooling cycle. The thermal noise, which is distinct from the flicker noise, deviates from the canonical Johnson-Nyquist value of 4kBTR as measured through the ratio zeta (T)(= Sth(T)4k(B)TR). The ratio. reaches a maximum value of zeta(M) at a temperature T* that is close to but distinct from the metal-insulator transition (MIT) temperature TMI. In all the films near T*, the scaled thermal noise maxima zeta(M) >> 1. The films were found to be largely strain relaxed with residual in-plane and out-of-plane strain as measured by x-ray reciprocal space mapping. It has been observed that the ratio T*/T-MI as well as zeta(M) have a close dependence on the in-plane-strain in the film. The enhanced thermal noise that occurs along with large correlated flicker noise both arise from slow kinetics of relaxation as established from temperature dependence of the correlation time (tau) that gets significantly larger in the temperature range around T *, reaching a maxima at T = T *. It has been proposed that the existence of large noise (both thermal and flicker noise) owes its origin to electronic phase separation (EPS) that exists near the MIT. A physical model has been suggested that EPS near MIT temperature can give rise to a sparse phase of nanometric small pockets of metallic phases (nanopuddles) that are surrounded by and embedded within the minority insulating phase. The nanopuddles act as a source of charge fluctuations and are coupled weakly to the majority metallic phase by tunneling through the layer of the minority insulating phase. Such isolated metallic nanopuddles can be Coulomb charged if the charging energy E-C >= k(B)T and can have slow relaxation of fluctuations acting as a source of large noise. It has been argued that the size distribution of the nanopuddles, their average size < d >, as well as the temperature dependence of their number density Nd can determine the temperature T *.
 
Publisher American Physical Society
 
Date 2021-10
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://cgcri.csircentral.net/5292/1/roy.pdf
Chatterjee, Sudipta and Bisht, Ravindra Singh and Reddy, V Raghavendra and Raychaudhuri, A K (2021) Emergence of large thermal noise close to a temperature-driven metal-insulator transition. Physical Review B, 104 (15). Art No-155101. ISSN 1098-0121
 
Relation http://cgcri.csircentral.net/5292/