Diffusive transport in graphene: the role of interband correlation
Abstract
We present a kinetic equation approach to investigate dc transport properties of graphene in the diffusive regime considering long-range electron-impurity scattering. In our study, the effects of interband correlation (or polarization) on conductivity are taken into account. We find that the conductivity contains not only the usual term inversely proportional to impurity density Ni, but also an anomalous term that is linear in Ni. This leads to a minimum in the density dependence of conductivity when the electron density N e is equal to a critical value, Nc. For N e>Nc the conductivity varies almost linearly with the electron density, while it is approximately inversely proportional to N e when N e<Nc in the diffusive regime. The effects of various scattering potentials on the conductivity minimum are also analyzed. Using typical experimental parameters, we find that for RPA screened electron-impurity scattering the minimum conductivity is about 5.1 e2/h when N e≈ 0.32Ni.
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