Electrical conductivity of nanorod-based transparent electrodes: Comparison of mean-field approaches

We mimic nanorod-based transparent electrodes as random resistor networks (RRNs) produced by the homogeneous, isotropic, and random deposition of conductive zero-width sticks onto an insulating substrate. We suppose that the number density (the number of objects per unit area of the surface) of thes...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysical review. E Vol. 105; no. 4-1; p. 044129
Main Authors Tarasevich, Yuri Yu, Eserkepov, Andrei V, Vodolazskaya, Irina V
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.04.2022
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:We mimic nanorod-based transparent electrodes as random resistor networks (RRNs) produced by the homogeneous, isotropic, and random deposition of conductive zero-width sticks onto an insulating substrate. We suppose that the number density (the number of objects per unit area of the surface) of these sticks exceeds the percolation threshold, i.e., the system under consideration is a conductor. We computed the electrical conductivity of random resistor networks versus the number density of conductive fillers for the wire-resistance-dominated case, for the junction-resistance-dominated case, and for an intermediate case. We also offer a consistent continuous variant of the mean-field approach. The results of the RRN computations were compared with this mean-field approach. Our computations suggest that, for a qualitative description of the behavior of the electrical conductivity in relation to the number density of conductive wires, the mean-field approximation can be successfully applied when the number density of the fillers n>2n_{c}, where n_{c} is the percolation threshold. However, note the mean-field approach slightly overestimates the electrical conductivity. We demonstrate that this overestimate is caused by the junction potential distribution.
ISSN:2470-0053
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevE.105.044129