1/F Noise in Doped and Undoped Amorphous Silicon
Loading...
Files
Date
2000
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd.
Open Access Color
BRONZE
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
We measured the spectrum of conductance fluctuations in n-type, p-type, and undoped hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) as a function of temperature. In general, the spectra can be fit to a power law, 1/fα, although in the p-type and undoped samples deviations from a strict power law occur. For n-type and p-type samples, the noise magnitude increases with temperature by approximately a factor of 5 from 295 to 450 K. The slope parameter, α, also increases with temperature in the p-type samples from near unity to 1.4 but not in the n-type sample where it remains near 1.05 independent of temperature. The undoped sample could be measured only over a limited range of elevated temperatures, but α does trend larger. The undoped and lightly doped material have similar noise levels but larger p-type doping reduces the noise by two orders of magnitude. Correlation measurements indicate the 1/f noise is Gaussian for all samples. However, intermittent random-telegraph noise is observed in n-type material.
Description
Keywords
Silicon, Random-telegraph noise, Electronic noise, Silicon, Electronic noise, Random-telegraph noise
Fields of Science
0103 physical sciences, 01 natural sciences
Citation
Johanson, R. E., Güneş, M., and Kasap, S. O. (2000). 1/f Noise in doped and undoped amorphous silicon. Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids, 266-269(PART 1), 242-246. doi:10.1016/S0022-3093(99)00832-7
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q2

OpenCitations Citation Count
6
Source
Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids
Volume
266-269
Issue
PART 1
Start Page
242
End Page
246
PlumX Metrics
Citations
CrossRef : 6
Scopus : 7
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 18
SCOPUS™ Citations
7
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
10
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Page Views
31749
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Downloads
1058
checked on Apr 27, 2026
Google Scholar™


