Title: Free electron Fermi gas (Sommerfeld, 1928)
1Free electron Fermi gas (Sommerfeld, 1928)
1926 Schrodinger eq., FD statistics
- counting of states
- Fermi energy, Fermi surface
- thermal property specific heat
- transport property
- electrical conductivity, Hall effect
- thermal conductivity
- In the free electron model, there is neither
lattice, nor electron-electron interaction, but
it gives good result on electron specific heat,
electric and thermal conductivities etc. - Free electron model is most accurate for alkali
metals.
2L. Hoddeson et al, Out of the crystal maze, p.104
3Quantization of k in a 1-dim box
Box BC
Periodic BC (PBC)
4Free electron in a 3-dim box
5Quantization of k in a 3-dim box
box BC periodic BC
- Each point can have 2 electrons (because of
spin). After filling in N electrons, the result
is a spherical sea of electrons called the Fermi
sphere. Its radius is called the Fermi wave
vector, and the energy of the outermost electron
is called the Fermi energy.
- Different BCs give the same Fermi wave vector
and the same energy
6 Connection between electron density and Fermi
energy
- For K, the electron density n1.41028 m-3,
therefore
- eF is of the order of the atomic energy levels.
- kF is of the order of a-1.
7Fermi temperature and Fermi velocity
- The Fermi temperature is of the order of 104 K
8important
Density of states D(e) (DOS, ???)
- D(e)de is the number of states within the energy
surfaces of e and ede
9- Free electron DOS (per volume) in 1D, 2D, and 3D
10- counting of states
- Fermi energy, Fermi surface
- thermal property specific heat
- transport property
- electrical conductivity, Hall effect
- thermal conductivity
11important
- Thermal distribution of electrons (fermions)
- Combine DOS D(E) and thermal dist f(E,T)
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12Electronic specific heat, heuristic argument (see
Kittel p.142 for details)
- Only the electrons near the Fermi surface are
excited by thermal energy kT. The number of
excited electrons are roughly of the order of N
N(kT /EF)
- The energy absorbed by the electrons is
U(T)-U(0) NA (kT)2/EF - specific heat Ce dU/dT
- 2R kT/EF
- 2R T/TF
- a factor of T/TF smaller than classical result
- T/TF 0.01 Therefore usually electron specific
is much smaller than phonon specific heat
- In general C Ce Cp
- ?T AT3
Ce is important only at very low T.
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14- counting of states
- Fermi energy, Fermi surface
- thermal property specific heat
- transport property
- electrical conductivity, Hall effect
- thermal conductivity
15Electrical transport
Classical view
Relaxation time
- Electric resistance comes from electron
scattering with defects and phonons.
- If these two types of scatterings are not
related, then - scattering rate
- Current density (n is electron density)
Electric conductivity
16Semi-classical view
- The center of the Fermi sphere is shifted by ?k
-eEt. - One can show that when ?kltltkF,
V???/V??3/2(?k/kF). - Therefore, the number of electrons being
perturbed away from equilibrium is only about
(?k/kF)Ne, or (vd/vF)Ne
- Semiclassical vs classical
- vF vs vd (differ by 109 !)
- (vd /vF) Ne vs Ne
The results are the same.
But the microscopic pictures are very
different.
17Calculating the scattering time t from measured
resistivity ?
- At room temp . The electron density
?t m/?ne2 2.510-14 s
- Fermi velocity of copper ? mean
free path ? vFt 40 nm.
- For a very pure Cu crystal at 4K, the
resistivity reduces by a factor of 105, which
means ? increases by the same amount (? 0.4
cm!). This cannot be explained using
classical physics.
- For a crystal without any defect, the only
resistance comes from phonon. Therefore, at very
low T, the electron mean free path theoretically
can be infinite.
Residual resistance at T0
18Hall effect (1879)
Classical view (consider only 2-dim motion)
19(?H)
???????????????????
Positive Hall coefficient? Cant be explained by
free electron theory. Band theory (next
chap) is required.
20optional
Quantum Hall effect (von Klitzing, 1979)
quantum
classical
1985
- h/e225812.807572(95) O
- offers one of the most accurate way to determine
the Planck constant.
- Rxy deviates from (h/e2)/C1 by less than 3 ppm
on the very first report. - This result is independent of the shape/size of
sample.
21optional
An accurate and stable resistance standard (1990)
22Thermal conduction in metal
- Both electron and phonon can carry thermal
energy (Electrons are dominant in metals). - Similar to electric conduction, only the
electrons near the Fermi energy can contribute
thermal current.
Heat capacity per unit volume
- Wiedemann-Franz law (1853) for a metal, thermal
conductivity is closely related to electric
conductivity.
Lorentz number K/sT2.4510-8
watt-ohm/deg2
23Thermal conduction in metal
Both electron and phonon can carry thermal energy
In a metal, electrons are dominant
- heat current density (classical theory)
Wiedemann-Franz law (1853)
Thermal conductivity
Classical
Semi-classical
Only electrons near FS contribute to ?
Lorentz number