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Using analytical arguments and computer simulations we show that the dependence of the hopping carrier mobility on the electric field $mu(F)/mu(0)$ in a system of random sites is determined by the localization length $a$, and not by the concentration of sites $N$. This result is in drastic contrast to what is usually assumed in the literature for a theoretical description of experimental data and for device modeling, where $N^{-1/3}$ is considered as the decisive length scale for $mu(F)$. We show that although the limiting value $mu(F rightarrow 0)$ is determined by the ratio $N^{-1/3}/a$, the dependence $mu(F)/mu(0)$ is sensitive to the magnitude of $a$, and not to $N^{-1/3}$. Furthermore, our numerical and analytical results prove that the effective temperature responsible for the combined effect of the electric field $F$ and the real temperature $T$ on the hopping transport via spatially random sites can contain the electric field only in the combination $eFa$.
Charge transport in disordered organic semiconductors occurs by hopping of charge carriers between localized sites that are randomly distributed in a strongly energy dependent density of states. Extracting disorder and hopping parameters from experim
We demonstrate that nuclear spin fluctuations lead to the electric current noise in the mesoscopic samples of organic semiconductors showing the pronounced magnetoresistance in weak fields. For the bipolaron and electron-hole mechanisms of organic ma
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