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Free Electron Theory

1) Metals are good conductors of electricity and heat due to their free-flowing electrons. 2) The free electron model treats electrons in metals as independent particles that move freely within the periodic potential of the metal's ion cores. 3) The allowed energies of electrons are quantized according to the crystal size and periodic boundary conditions, leading to a characteristic density of electron states.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
226 views17 pages

Free Electron Theory

1) Metals are good conductors of electricity and heat due to their free-flowing electrons. 2) The free electron model treats electrons in metals as independent particles that move freely within the periodic potential of the metal's ion cores. 3) The allowed energies of electrons are quantized according to the crystal size and periodic boundary conditions, leading to a characteristic density of electron states.

Uploaded by

Bijay Sharma
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Electronic Properties of Solids

R.J. Nicholas

Electronic Properties: • Metals


• Semiconductors
• Insulators
• Paramagnets
• Diamagnets
• Ferromagnets
• Superconductors

Combination of : Crystal Structure


Atomic Structure

Free electron theory of metals

• Metals are good conductors (both electrical and thermal)

• Electronic heat capacity has an additional (temperature

dependent) contribution from the electrons.

• Why are some materials metals and others not?

Simple approximation: treat electrons as free


to move within the crystal

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 1


Free electron theory of metals

• Alkali metals (K, Na, Rb) and Noble metals (Cu, Ag,
Au) have filled shell + 1 outer s-electron.
• Atomic s-electrons are delocalised due to overlap of
outer orbits.
• Crystal looks like positive ion cores of charge +e
embedded in a sea of conduction electrons
• Conduction electrons can interact with each other and
ion cores but these interactions are weak because:

(1) Periodic crystal potential (ion cores) is orthogonal to conduction


electrons - they are eigenstates of total Hamiltonian e.g. for Na conduct.
electrons are 3s states, but cores are n=1 and n=2 atomic orbitals.

(2) Electron-electron scattering is suppressed by Pauli exclusion


principle.

Assumptions:

(i) ions are static - adiabatic approx.


(ii) electrons are independent - do not interact.
(iii) model interactions with ion cores by using an “effective mass” m*
(iv) free electrons so we usually put m* = me

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 2


Free Electron Model

L
Put free electrons into a very wide potential well the
same size as the crystal i.e. they are 'de-localised'

Free electron properties


Free electron Hamiltonian has
= 2 ∂ 2ψ
only kinetic energy operator: Eψ = −
2m ∂x 2

Free electrons are plane waves ψ = A e ± ikx

with:
Momentum: Energy: Group velocity:
∂ψ = 2 ∂ 2ψ =2k 2 ∂ω 1 ∂E =k
i= = ± =k ψ − = ψ = =
∂x 2m ∂x 2 2m ∂k = ∂k m

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 3


Free Electron Model – Periodic
boundary conditions

L L
Add a second piece of crystal the same size:
The properties must be the same.

Density of states
Calculate allowed values of k. ψ ( x) = ψ ( x + L)
Use periodic (Born-von Karman) ∴ e ikx = e ik ( x + L )
boundary conditions:
∴ e ikL = 1
2π 4π
L = size of crystal ∴ k = 0, ± , ±
L L

∴δk =
L

Density of allowed states in reciprocal (k-) space is:


ΔK ΔVK
in 1 − D or in 3 − D x 2 for spin states
δ k δ k3

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 4


Density of states (2)
States have energies
ε to ε + dε 2
g (ε )d ε = g (k )dk = 4π k 2 dk ×
δ k3
dk
∴ g (ε )d ε = g (k ) dε

=2 k 2 8π
1
ε = ⎛ 2m ⎞ 2
1
2m = 3 k 2
⎜ 2 ⎟ 1

⎛ 2π ⎞
⎜ ⎟ ⎝= ⎠ 2ε 2
1 ⎝ L ⎠
⎛ 2mε ⎞ 2
k =⎜ 2 ⎟ 1
⎝ = ⎠ 4π 2mε ⎛ 2m ⎞ 2
1
= ⎜ ⎟ 1

=2 ⎝ =2 ⎠
3
⎛ 2π ⎞
dk ⎛ 2m ⎞
1
2
1 ⎜
⎝ L ⎠
⎟ ε 2

=⎜ ⎟
dε ⎝ =2 ⎠ 2ε
1
2
⎛ 2m ⎞
3
2 1
= 4π ⎜ 2 ⎟ ε 2
dε × V
⎝h ⎠

Fermi Energy

Electrons are Fermions N = ∫ g (ε ) f


0
F −D (ε ) d ε

μ
at T = 0 N = ∫ g (ε ) d ε
0

3
N 8π ⎛ 2mEF ⎞ 2
n= = ⎜ ⎟
V 3 ⎝ h2 ⎠
μ at T = 0 is known as the 2
⎛ 3N ⎞ 3
h2
Fermi Energy, EF EF = ⎜ ⎟
⎝ 8π V ⎠ 2m

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 5


Typical value for EF e.g. Sodium (monatomic)
crystal structure: b.c.c. crystal basis: single Na atom
lattice points per conventional (cubic) unit cell: 2
conduction electrons per unit cell 2
∴ electrons per lattice point = 1

lattice constant (cube side) = a = 0.423 nm


∴ density of electrons n = N/V= 2/a3 = 2.6 x 1028 m-3
∴ EF = 3.2 eV

Fermi Temperature TF? kBTF = EF ∴ TF = 24,000 K

Finite Temperatures and Heat Capacity

Fermi-Dirac distribution function fF-D = 1/(eE-μ/kBT + 1)

electrons are excited by an energy ~ kBT

Number of electrons is ≈ kBT g(EF)

∴ ΔE ≈ kB2T2 g(EF)

∴ CV = ΔE/ ΔT ≈ 2kB2T g(EF)

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 6


∴ ln n = 3 ln E + const.
Previously 2
we have n = AEF3/2 dn 3 dE
∴ =
n 2 E
dn 3 n
= = g ( EF )
dE 2 EF
k BT T
∴ C v = 3nk B = 3nk B
EF TF

∴ Heat Capacity is:


(i) less than classical value by factor ~kBT/EF
(ii) proportional to g(EF)

Is this significant?
Lattice Electrons

Room
Temperature 3nat.kB π2/2 nkB (kBT/EF)

Low 12π4/5 nat.kB (T/ΘD)3 π2/2 nkB (kBT/EF)


Temperature

C/T = βT2 + γ
Debye term free electron term

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 7


Rigorous derivation

∞ ∂f F − D
U = ∫ ε g (ε ) f F − D (ε ) d ε ?
∂T
0

∂U

∂f 1 ε − μ
∴ = ∫ ε g (ε ) dε f = x
, x=
e + 1 kT
∂T 0
∂T
∂f − ex ∂x

x e dx 2 x = ×
∫ ( )
2
= g ( EF ) k B T
2
+ δ ∂T ex + 1 ∂T
(e )
2
x
− EF + 1
k BT ∞
x e x dx
π2 ≈−∞
δ ∝ ∫
(e )
2 2
= g ( EF ) k B T − EF
x
+ 1
3 k BT

= 0 (why?)

Magnetic susceptibility

• Susceptibility for a spin ½ particle is:

μ B2 μ0
χ= / electron
kT
• This is much bigger than is found experimentally
- Why?

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 8


Pauli paramagnetism

Separate density of states for spin up and spin down,


shifted in energy by ± ½gμBB (g=2)
Imbalance of electron moments Δn
Δn = ½ g(εF) × 2μBB
giving a magnetization M
M = μB Δn = μB2 g(εF) B
and a susceptibility
χ = M/H = μ0 μB2 g(εF) = 3nμ0 μB2 /2εF

k-space picture and the Fermi Surface

= 2k 2
T=0 states filled up to EF ∴ = EF
2m

Map of filled states in k-space


2mEF
= Fermi surface ∴ kF =
=2

4π k F3
N = 2×
or we can write: 3 ⎛⎜ 2π ⎞⎟ 3
⎝ L ⎠

3π 2 N
∴ k F3 =
V

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 9


k-space picture and the Fermi Surface

= 2k 2
T=0 states filled up to EF ∴ = EF
2m

E 2mEF
∴ kF =
=2
EF

k
kF

How big is Fermi surface/sphere compared to


Brillouin Zone?

Simple cubic structure

volume of Brillouin Zone = (2π/a)3

electron density n = 1/a3

volume of Fermi sphere = 4πkF3/3 = 4π3/a3

= half of one B.Z.

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 10


Electron Transport - Electrical Conductivity
Equation of motion: Force = rate of change of momentum
∂k
= = − e (E + B × v )
∂t
Apply electric field - electrons are accelerated to a steady
state with a drift velocity vd - momentum is lost by
scattering with an average momentum relaxation time τ
mvd
∴ momentum loss = = −eE
τ
ne 2τ
∴ current j = nevd = E
m μ is mobility with:
ne 2τ vd = μE
∴ conductivity σ = = neμ
m

What happens in k-space?


All electrons in k-space are
accelerated by electric field: = δ k = Fδ t = − eE δ t

On average all electrons E


shifted by: δ k = − eEτ
= EF

k
kF
δk

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 11


What happens in k-space?

All electrons in k-space are


= δ k = Fδ t = − eE δ t
accelerated by electric field:

eEτ
On average all electrons shifted by: δk = −
=
Fermi sphere is shifted in k-space by δk << kF
∴ To relax electron momentum k must be changed by ~ kF
Scattering occurs at EF
∴ we need phonons with large value of k. But phonon energy is small
so only a small fraction of electrons kBT/εF can be scattered

Scattering processes

Basic Principle: Scattering occurs because of deviations


from perfect crystal arrangement

Electron scattering mechanisms:


(i) thermal vibrations i.e. phonons (vibrations of the atoms
are a deviation from perfect crystal structure)
(ii) presence of impurities - charged impurities are very
important - scattering is by Coulomb force i.e.
Rutherford scattering.

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 12


Matthiessen’s rule: Scattering rates (1/τ) add

m
∴ρ =
ne 2
∑ 1τ = ρ T + ρ i

Mean free path (λ):


electrons are moving with Fermi velocity vF
∴ λ = v F τ ( NOT v d τ )

Low temperature mean free paths can be very long as


electrons are only scattered by impurities

Hall Effect
In a magnetic Field B the electron experiences
a force perpendicular to its velocity.
A current j causes a build up of charge at the
edges which generates an Electric field E
which balances the Lorentz force

( − e ) ( E + v d × B ) y = 0; E y = (vd ) x B z

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 13


In a magnetic Field B the electron
Hall Effect experiences a force perpendicular to its
velocity.
A current j causes a build up of charge at
the edges which generates an Electric
Balance of forces: field E which balances the Lorentz force

( − e ) ( E + v d × B ) y = 0; E y = (vd ) x B z

The Hall coefficient RH is: RH =


Ey
j x Bz

j x = n ( − e) vd ⇒ RH = − 1
ne
Negative sign is sign of the charge on the electron

Metal Charge/Atom (units of electron charge e) Group


Hall Expt. FE Theory
Lithium -0.79 -1 I
Sodium -1.13 -1 I
Potassium -1.05 -1 I
Copper -1.36 -1 IB
Silver -1.18 -1 IB
Gold -1.47 -1 IB
Beryllium +0.1 -2 II
Magnesium -0.88 -2 II
Calcium -0.76 -2 II
Zinc +0.75 -2 IIB
Cadmium +1.2 -2 IIB
Aluminium +1.0 -3 III
Indium +1.0 -3 III

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 14


Thermal conductivity
In metals heat is mainly carried by the electrons
Simple kinetic theory formula for thermal conductivity K:
K = 1/3CλvF [C = π2/3 kB2T g(EF) = π2/2 nkB kBT/EF]
= π2/6 λvF nkB kBT/EF [λ = vFτ ; EF = ½mvF2]
= π2/3m n kB2 τ T
Scattering processes
• Low temperatures: defects, τ independent of T
• Intermediate temp. : Low Temp phonons - Debye
model τ ∝ T-3
• High temperatures: ‘classical’ phonons τ ∝ T-1

Wiedeman-Franz ratio
Electrical and Thermal conductivities of electrons are both
proportional to the relaxation time τ
Taking the ratio of the two should make this cancel so if we
define the Lorenz number as L = K/(σT) we have the

Wiedeman-Franz Law: L = K =
π 2 2
kB
σT 3e 2
Predicted value is absolute and the same for all metals.
Works well at high and low temps, - breaks down in ‘Debye’
region where energy and charge scattering are different

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 15


Successes and Failures of Free Electron
Model
Successes:
• Temperature dependence of Heat Capacity
• paramagnetic (Pauli) susceptibility
• Ratio of thermal and electrical conductivities (Lorentz number)
• Magnitudes of heat capacities and Hall effect in simple metals

Failures:
• Heat capacities and Hall effect of many metals are wrong
• Hall effect can be positive
• Does not explain why mean free paths can be so long
• Does not explain why some materials are metals, some insulators
and some are semiconductors

Nearly Free Electron Approximation


Use a travelling wavefunction for an electron, e ikx, with kinetic
energy =2k2/2m

Assume that this is Bragg scattered by the wavevector G=2π/a to


give a second wave e i(k-G)x with energy =2(k-G)2/2m

Crystal potential is periodic in real space. Therefore we can


Fourier Transform the potential so that:

V ( x) = ∑ G
VG exp (iGx )

For a schematic solution we calculate what happens for a


single Fourier component VG so V(x) = VG(eiGx + e-iGx)

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 16


Nearly Free Electron Approximation
Use a travelling wavefunction for an electron, e ikx, with kinetic
energy =2k2/2m

Bragg scattering
θ
d Δk = 2|k|sinθ
2dsinθ = λ = 4π/λ sinθ = 2π/d

Δk = G = ha* + kb* +lc*


a
2θ With d =
h2 + k 2 + l 2

Formally what we are doing is to solve the Hamiltonian form of


Schrödinger equation
Hψ = Eψ
where ψ are the two travelling wave solutions. Expanding gives:

⎛ H11 − λ H12 ⎞ ⎛ eikx ⎞ ⎛ eikx ⎞


⎜⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ = (E − λ ) ⎜⎜ i (k −G )x ⎟⎟
⎝ H 21 H 22 − λ ⎟⎠ ⎜⎝ ei (k −G ) x ⎟⎠ ⎝e ⎠

= 2 (k − G )
2
=2 ∂2 = 2k 2
H11 = ψ1 * − ψ1 = , H 22 =
2m ∂x 2 2m 2m

H12 = ψ 1 * V ( x) ψ 2 = VG

Metals – HT10 – RJ Nicholas 17

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