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제 4 장 Metals I: The Free Electron Model Outline 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Conduction electrons 4.3 the free-electron gas 4.4 Electrical conductivity 4.5 Electrical.

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Presentation on theme: "제 4 장 Metals I: The Free Electron Model Outline 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Conduction electrons 4.3 the free-electron gas 4.4 Electrical conductivity 4.5 Electrical."— Presentation transcript:

1 제 4 장 Metals I: The Free Electron Model Outline 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Conduction electrons 4.3 the free-electron gas 4.4 Electrical conductivity 4.5 Electrical resistivity (T) 4.6 heat capacity of conduction electrons 4.7 Fermi surface 4.8 Electrical conductivity: effects of the Fermi surface 4.9 Thermal conductivity in metals 4.10 Motion in a magnetic field; cyclotron resonance and the Hall effect 4.11 AC conductivity and optical properties 4.12 Thermionic emission 4.13 failure of the free-electron model

2 4.1 Introduction Metals in life from ancient to future. Example: Duralumin (Cu, Mn, and Mg) in Car, Cu in electrical wire, Ag and Au as jewelry Common properties: physical strength, density, electrical and thermal conductivity Optical (visible) reflectivity Explanation of many physical properties by assuming cloud of free-electrons all over sample Most of optical properties can be explained but with a limit.

3 4.2 Conduction electrons Na gas; a simple collection of free atoms. Each atom has 11 electrons orbiting around the nucleus. 11 Na: 1s 2 2s 2 2p 6 3s 1 1 valence el. loosely bound to the rest of the system(=Na 1+ ). can explain ordinary chemical reaction. Na atoms to form a metal bcc structure (section 1.7) d = 3.7  Å Core electrons Valence electron d

4 4.2 Conduction electrons (p138) Na atoms to form a metal. bcc structure (section 1.7) two atoms overlap slightly  valence el. can hop from one to the neighboring atom  move around freely all over the crystal.  conduction electrons in a crystal !! Naming since they carriers electrical current in an electric field. Cf) core electrons do not give electrical current. N=concentration M’=atomic weight, Z = atomic valence (1+, 2+,..),  m =density of the substance Fig. 4.1 overlap of the 3s in solid sodium

5 4.3 Free electron gas (p140) e cond. is completely free, except for a potential at the surface. Free motion except occasional reflection from the surface which confines e cond.. Like gas!! So called free electron gas! How about interaction between 1) e cond. and e core.? a)Strong coulomb attraction between e cond. and core ion is compensated by repulsive potential due to array of core ion by quantum effect. b)e cond. spend tiny time near core ion. c)Short-range screened coulomb potential rather than a long-range pure coulomb potential.

6 interaction between 2) conduction electrons themselves? Pauli exclusion principle:  =  1 (a)+  2 (b) 1)electrons of parallel  or  spins tend to stay away. 2)electron pair having opposite spin  tends be stay way from each other to minimize the energy of the system. Each electron is surrounded by a hole” The hole with a radius of about 1 Å. The hole move with each electron. Interaction between two specific electron is always screened by the other electrons.  very low interaction between the two electrons. Free electron gas vs ordinary gas 1)charged, i.e. like plasma 2)N is very large N~10 23 cm -3 while ordinary gas ~ 10 19 cm -3 Jellium model : ions form a uniform jelly into which e cond. move around

7 4.4 electrical conductivity (p142) Law of electrical conduction in metal : Ohm’s law J: current density per area, E=electrical field Substitute into (4.2) Substitute J and E (4.3) and (4.4) Electric field accelerates e cond. (not ions in the crystal) thus electric current.

8 Newton’ equation with friction force with  = collision time. Collision and friction tends to reduce the velocity to zero. Final (or steady) state solution. Terminal velocity (drift velocity) vs. random velocity 4.4 electrical conductivity (p142)

9 Newton’ equation with friction force with  = collision time. Collision and friction tends to reduce the (average vector)velocity to zero. Terminal velocity (drift velocity) vs. random velocity J: current density per area is proportional to E field,

10 dt A

11  = collision time, mean free lifetime?  ~ 10 -14 sec

12 metal semiconductor

13  = relaxation time?  ~ 10 -14 sec  vs. mean free path and random velocity

14 Origin of collision time l ≈ 10 -8 m ≈ 10 2 Å Quantum mechanics, deBroglie relation: A light wave traveling in a crystal is not scattered at all. The ions form a perfect lattice, no collision at all, that is l =∞ and hence τ≈∞, leads to infinite conductivity. l ≈ 10 2 Å. d≈ 4Å 25x unit cell


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