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Condensed Matter Physics: Quantum Statistics & Electronic Structure in Solids Read: Chapter 10 (statistical physics) and Chapter 11 (solid-state physics)

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Presentation on theme: "Condensed Matter Physics: Quantum Statistics & Electronic Structure in Solids Read: Chapter 10 (statistical physics) and Chapter 11 (solid-state physics)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Condensed Matter Physics: Quantum Statistics & Electronic Structure in Solids
Read: Chapter 10 (statistical physics) and Chapter 11 (solid-state physics) Homework due Wednesday Nov. 12th Chapter 10: 1, 3, 6, 9, 11, 20, 23, 25, 29, 35

2 Quantum Statistics In quantum physics, identical particles must be treated as indistinguishable – this affects counting of states In quantum physics there are two types of particles – fermions (half-integer spin, e.g. electrons) and bosons (integral spin, e.g. photons) Bosons and Fermions obey different statistics

3 Different statistics Fermions Bosons
Obey the Pauli Exclusion Principle – no two particles can have the exact same quantum numbers Distribution function

4 Differences fermions bosons
Only one particle per quantum state allowed Cannot all “condense” to E=0 Must fill up to the “Fermi Energy” ABE does not depend strongly on temperature The only states that have any probability at low temperatures are those at E=0 for which the exponential approaches 1 This is Bose-Einstein Condensation

5 Free Electron Gas in Metals
Solid metals are bonded by the metallic bond One or two of the valence electrons from each atom are free to move throughout the solid All atoms share all the electrons. A metal is a lattice of positive ions immersed in a gas of electrons. The binding between the electrons and the lattice is what holds the solid together

6 Fermi-Dirac “Filling” Function
Probability of electrons to be found at various energy levels. For E – EF = 0.05 eV  f(E) = 0.12 For E – EF = 7.5 eV  f(E) = 10 –129 Exponential dependence has HUGE effect! Temperature dependence of Fermi-Dirac function shown as follows:

7 Free Electron Gas in Metals
The number of electrons in the interval E to E+dE is therefore The first term is the Fermi-Dirac distribution and the second is the density of states g(E)dE

8 Free Electron Gas in Metals
From n(E) dE we can calculate many global characteristics of the electron gas. Here are just a few The Fermi energy – the maximum energy level occupied by the free electrons at absolute zero The average energy The total number of electrons in the electron gas

9 Free Electron Gas in Metals
The total number of electrons N is given by The average energy of a free electron is given by

10 Free Electron Gas in Metals
At T = 0, the integrals are easy to do. For example, the total number of electrons is

11 Free Electron Gas in Metals
The average energy of an electron is This implies EF = k TF defines the Fermi temperature

12 Summary of metallic state
The ions in solids form regular lattices A metal is a lattice of positive ions immersed in a gas of electrons. All ions share all electrons The attraction between the electrons and the lattice is called a metallic bond At T = 0, all energy levels up to the Fermi energy are filled

13 Heat Capacity of Electron Gas
By definition, the heat capacity (at constant volume) of the electron gas is given by where U is the total energy of the gas. For a gas of N electrons, each with average energy <E>, the total energy is given by

14 Heat Capacity of Electron Gas
Total energy In general, this integral must be done numerically. However, for T << TF, we can use a reasonable approximation.

15 Heat Capacity of Electron Gas
At T= 0, the total energy of the electron gas is For 0 < T << TF, only a small fraction kT/EF of the electrons can be excited to higher energy states Moreover, the energy of each is increased by roughly kT

16 Heat Capacity of Electron Gas
Therefore, the total energy can be written as where a = p2/4, as first shown by Sommerfeld The heat capacity of the electron gas is predicted to be


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