scispace - formally typeset
B

Boris I Shklovskii

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  230
Citations -  15773

Boris I Shklovskii is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electron & Variable-range hopping. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 225 publications receiving 14935 citations. Previous affiliations of Boris I Shklovskii include Ioffe Institute & Russian Academy of Sciences.

Papers
More filters

Electronic properties of doped semiconductors

TL;DR: In the last fifteen years, there has been a noticeable shift towards impure semiconductors -a shift which came about because it is precisely the impurities that are essential to a number of major semiconductor devices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coulomb gap and low temperature conductivity of disordered systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the Coulomb interaction between localized electrons is shown to create a soft gap in the density of states near the Fermi level, and the form of the density within the gap is discussed.
Book

Electronic Properties of Doped Semiconductors

TL;DR: In the last fifteen years, there has been a noticeable shift towards impure semiconductors -a shift which came about because it is precisely the impurities that are essential to a number of major semiconductor devices as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Colloquium: The physics of charge inversion in chemical and biological systems

TL;DR: A review of recent advances in the physics of strongly interacting charged systems functioning in water at room temperature can be found in this article, which discusses the universal theory of charge inversion based on the idea of a strongly correlated liquid of adsorbed counterions, similar to a Wigner crystal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Critical Behaviour of Conductivity and Dielectric Constant near the Metal-Non-Metal Transition Threshold

TL;DR: In this article, the metal-non-metal transition takes place when the volume fraction of the metallic phase approaches the percolation threshold, and it is shown that the static dielectric constant diverges near the threshold.