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Flashcards in this deck (13)

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  • What is the Drude formula for electrical conductivity?


    \(\sigma = \dfrac{ne^{2}\tau}{m}\)

    drude conductivity
  • How do you calculate the relaxation time \(\tau\) from a measured electrical conductivity \(\sigma\)?


    \(\tau = \dfrac{m\sigma}{ne^{2}}\)

    relaxation conductivity
  • What is the mean free path \(\ell\) in the Drude model?


    \(\ell = \nu\tau\)

    meanfreepath drude
  • In the classical Drude model, what velocity v is used in the mean free path formula ℓ = vτ?


    v = \(v_{\mathrm{rms}} = \sqrt{\dfrac{3k_B T}{m}}\)

    drude velocity
  • In the Sommerfeld model, which velocity v is used in the relation \(\ell = v\tau\)?


    • v = VF
    sommerfeld velocity
  • Why is a large mean free path surprising in metals?


    Because electrons travel several lattice constants before scattering, so a perfect periodic lattice does not scatter electrons.

    meanfreepath lattice
  • What physical mechanisms determine the relaxation time τ?


    • Phonon scattering
    • Impurities
    • Defects
    • Grain boundaries
    scattering relaxation
  • Which scattering mechanism dominates the relaxation time τ at high temperature?


    • Phonon scattering
    scattering temperature
  • State the Wiedemann–Franz law relating thermal and electrical conductivities.


    \(K = L\,T\,\sigma\)

    wiedemannfranz thermal
  • What is the experimental value of the Lorenz number?


    L ≈ 2.44 × 10-8 WQK-2

    lorenz wiedemannfranz
  • Why does the Wiedemann–Franz law fail at intermediate temperatures?


    • Scattering becomes energy-dependent, causing electrical and thermal transport to be affected differently
    wiedemannfranz scattering transport
  • How do the following transport properties in metals change as temperature T increases?


    • τ (relaxation time) decreases
    • σ (electrical conductivity) decreases
    • ℓ (mean free path) decreases
    • p (resistivity or scattering rate) increases
    temperature transport metals
  • Why does a perfect periodic lattice not cause electrical resistance?


    Because electrons form Bloch waves; only deviations from periodicity cause scattering.

    bloch resistance
Appunti di studio

Overview

  • Concise summary of charge and heat transport in metals using the Drude and Sommerfeld pictures.
  • Key relations: conductivity, relaxation time, mean free path, Wiedemann–Franz law.

Drude model — electrical conductivity

  • Drude formula for DC electrical conductivity:

\(\(\sigma = \frac{n e^2 \tau}{m}\)\)

where n = carrier density, e = electron charge, \tau = relaxation time, m = electron mass. - Interpretation: conductivity grows with more carriers, longer scattering time, and lower effective mass.

Relaxation time (\tau)

  • Solve Drude formula for \tau:

\(\(\tau = \frac{m\,\sigma}{n e^2}\)\) - Physical meaning: average time between momentum-relaxing scattering events. - Typical scattering mechanisms: phonons (dominant at high T), impurities, defects, grain boundaries.

Mean free path (\ell)

  • Definition in transport theory:

\(\(\ell = v\tau\)\)

where v is the characteristic electron speed used for transport.

Which velocity to use

  • Classical Drude (thermal classical gas): use root-mean-square speed

\(\(v_{\mathrm{rms}} = \sqrt{\frac{3 k_B T}{m}}\)\)

Vrms = sqrt(3 k_B T / m) equation

  • Sommerfeld (quantum, low T) model: use the Fermi velocity

\(\(v = v_F\)\)

where \(v_F\) is set by the Fermi energy; thermal excitations occur near the Fermi surface.

Why a large mean free path is surprising

  • In many metals measured \ell spans several lattice constants, implying electrons travel many unit cells before scattering.
  • A perfect periodic lattice would not scatter Bloch states; observed resistance requires deviations from periodicity.

Scattering mechanisms that set \tau

  • Phonon scattering: increases with temperature; dominant at higher T.
  • Impurities and defects: temperature-independent (residual scattering at low T).
  • Grain boundaries and microstructure: can shorten \ell independent of intrinsic scattering.

Wiedemann–Franz law (electrical ↔ thermal transport)

  • Relates electronic thermal conductivity \(\kappa\) to electrical conductivity \(\sigma\):

\(\(\kappa = L\,T\,\sigma\)\)

where \(L\) is the Lorenz number. - Experimental Lorenz number (metals, low T limit):

\(\(L \approx 2.44\times 10^{-8}\ \mathrm{W\,\Omega\,K^{-2}}\)\)

When the law fails

  • At intermediate temperatures scattering becomes energy-dependent, so heat and charge currents weigh electron energies differently.
  • Electron–phonon scattering and inelastic processes break the simple proportionality between \(\kappa\) and \(\sigma\).

Temperature dependence of transport (qualitative)

  • As temperature increases:
  • \tau decreases (more phonon scattering).
  • \sigma decreases (lower electrical conductivity).
  • \ell decreases (shorter mean free path).
  • Resistivity (\rho) generally increases.

Perfect lattice and Bloch waves

  • In a perfectly periodic potential electrons form Bloch waves which do not decay; an ideal lattice gives no resistance.
  • Only deviations from periodicity (phonons, impurities, defects) produce momentum-relaxing scattering and finite resistivity.

Quick practical notes

  • To estimate \ell from measurements: measure \(\sigma\), compute \(\tau\) from \(\tau=\tfrac{m\sigma}{ne^2}\), then use appropriate \(v\) to get \(\ell=v\tau\).
  • Use \(v_{\mathrm{rms}}\) at high T or when treating electrons classically; use \(v_F\) for low-temperature, quantum-degenerate electrons.

Common tags / topics to review

  • Drude model, Sommerfeld model, relaxation time, mean free path, Wiedemann–Franz law, Lorenz number, scattering mechanisms