Title: Ch 9. Fermi Surfaces
1Solid State Physics
Ch 9. Fermi Surfaces and Metals
Prof. J. Joo (jjoo_at_korea.ac.kr) Department of
Physics, Korea University http//smartpolymer.kore
a.ac.kr
29.1 Introduction
- Fermi surfaces ? the surface of constant energy
eF in k- space ? separates the
unfilled states from the filled states at 0K - The electrical properties of the metal
- determined by the shape of the Fermi surface
- (? the current is due to changes in the
occupancy of states near the Fermi
surface) - (?) (m)-1?d2e/dk2 or vg?de/dk
- Reduced zone scheme
- ? Always possible to select the K within the
1st B.Z. by using a suitable reciprocal lattice
vector G
lt Reduced Z.S gt
lt Extended Z.S gt
k
k
39.2 Construction of Fermi Surfaces
? In reduced zone scheme
3b
2d
2c
2a
3a
2b
2nd zone
3rd zone
? 2?? free-el.-gas? ?? Fermi surface
?
1st
? in reduced Z.S.?? 2?? free-el.-gas? ????,
3rd
2nd
1st
in periodic
free el. Fermi surface in reduced zone
49.3 Nearly Free Electrons
- Weakly perturbed by lattice potential
- Using the approximation constructions
- free-hand by the use of 4 facts
- Interaction with lattice ? energy gap
- Fermi surface intersects zone boundary
(periodicity) - Crystal potential rounds out sharp corners in the
Fermi surfaces - Total vol. enclosed by the Fermi surface depend
on n and independent of the lattice
interaction electron concentration
2nd
3rd
5Solid State Physics
Ch 10. Plasmons, Polaritons, and Polarons
Prof. J. Joo (jjoo_at_korea.ac.kr) Department of
Physics, Korea University http//smartpolymer.kore
a.ac.kr
610.1 Plasma Optics
- ? Dielectric Function of Electron Gas
- Displacement (CGS unit)
- ? Eq. of motion of free electron in electric
field (no bound and no damping) - ? Plasma a medium with equal concentration of
positive and negative charges of which one
charge type is mobile. - In solid, the negative charges of conduction
els. Are balanced by an equal concentration of
positive charges of ion cores.
? Positive ion background dielectric const.
?(8) ?gtgt?p?
??
710.2 Dispersion Relation for Electromagnetic
Waves
- In non-magnetic isotropic medium, the EM eq.
- ??? ??
- If e real and gt0. For ? real, k is real. And
transverse EM wave propagates with the phase
velocity - If e real and lt0. For ? real, k is imaginary.
The wave is damped with a characteristic length - If e complex. For ? real, k is complex. The
wave is damped. - e 8 . Finite response without applied field.
- e 0 longitudinal polarized wave ? later
810.3 Electrostatic Screening
- Consider a positive charge embeded in el. gas
- el. gas tends together around and thus to screen
the positive charge - static screening described by e(0, k )
- Thomas-Fermi dielectric function
- Screened Coulomb Potential
r
screened the potential!
910.4 Mott Metal - Insulator Transition
- Hydrogen atom ? half-filled ? metal
- Hydrogen molecule ? filled ? insulator
- At T0K, H-atom is insulator or metal ?
- depends on a
- ac 4.5 a0 Bohr radius
-
- considering
- At high concentration, ks? large, then
- e-ksr factor is weak! ? possible to be
metal! - ???, ks is small ? insulator!
-
- Polaritons
- ? Quantum of the coupled phonon-photon
transverse wave. - due to transverse optical phonons and
transverse EM waves - ? Note longitudinal phonons do not coupled
to transverse photons in crystal
Fig.10b
metal
insulator
s (S/cm)
2
4
6
n, in 1018 cm-3
- M-I transition depends on the extrinsic
parameters such as pressure, composition,
magnetic field, temp. - Insulating phase suggest el.-el.
interaction (Coulomb gap.)
10Solid State Physics
Ch 11. Optical Process and Excitons
Prof. J. Joo (jjoo_at_korea.ac.kr) Department of
Physics, Korea University http//smartpolymer.kore
a.ac.kr
1111.1 Introduction (1)
- Rapid progress of use of laser for band structure
?optical spectroscopy - from Far-IR, IR (infrared), visible,
ultraviolet - the most important intrinsic property of matter
- e(?)er(?)iei(?) ??
- Not directly accessible experimentally
from optical measurements. - (???) obtained from reflectance (R) or
transmittance - refractive
index n(?) - extinction
coefficient K(?) -
- ? er(?)n2-K2
- ei(?)2nK
- reflectivity coefficient r(?)
-
UV/Vis
difficult to find!
phase
amplitude
1211.1 Introduction (2)
Reference A. M. Appendix K (p.776)
- ?
- ???, ????? ?? ??? ? reflectance R(?)
- ?(?) can be calculated from the measured
reflectance R(?), if R(?) is
known at all frequencies. - ltKramers-Kronig Relationgt
-
p principal part of integral -
s parameter -
1311.1 Introduction (3)
11.2 Hagen-Rubens Formula or Approximation
- Summary to find e(?)er(?)iei(e)
- Measure R(?) ? ? 0 ? 8 , if possible
- Use k-k relation
- Known R(?), ?(?)
- Use r(?)R1/2(?)e i?(?)
- Find n(?) and k(?)
- ? er(?)n2-k2 and ei(?)2nk
-
-
-
- Rrr
- for (transparent) dielectric
- Kltlt1 ? K ?0
- for metal, K is large and n is also large
- nK
- (in the limit of low freq.)
Reference Introduction to modern physics by
Fowles p. 168
1411.3 Excitons (1)
- lt Electronic Interband Transition gt
- Direct interband absorption of photon h?
- lt Excitons gt
- ?? bound el.-hole pair (due to attractive
Coulomb interaction) - Exciton can move through the crystal and
transport energy. But it does NOT transport
charge. (?electrically neutral) - All excitons are unstable w.r.t. the ultimate
recombination process, in which the el. drops
into the hole in the valence band, accompanied by
the emission of photon or phonon.
Eg
e-
1511.3 Excitons (2)
- In the formation of excitons, the energy is lower
w.r.t. the threshold (Eg) by the binding energy
of the excition (1meV1eV) - 3 ways to measure the exciton binding energy
- Optical transitions from the V.B. ?required
energy Eg-Ex - Recombination luminescence
- Photo-ionization of excitons ? to form free
carriers - (?? 7 ??)
- lt Exciton condensation into el.-hole drops (EHD)
gt - Exciton decay time 8µs
- However, exciton condensation at low temp.
- ? condensed into a drop ? EHD life-time 40µs
C.B.
Eg
Eex exciton binding energy
exciton energy level
h?
V.B.
16Solid State Physics
Ch 13. Dielectrics and Ferroelectrics
Prof. J. Joo (jjoo_at_korea.ac.kr) Department of
Physics, Korea University http//smartpolymer.kore
a.ac.kr
1713.1 Questions
- What is the relation between the dielectric
polarization p and the macroscopic el. field E? - What is the relation between the dielectric
polarization p and the local el. field which acts
at the site of an atom in the lattice? - ? polarization P dipole moment per unit vol.
- To find the contribution of the polarization to
macroscopic field, simplify the sum over all
dipoles in the sample. - Total macroscopic el. field
- applied due to uniform
polarization - field (?depolarization field)
- E.g.) Fig.4 tends to oppose the applied
field (E0) -
-
E0
E0
P
E1
E0
1813.2 Dielectric Constant and Polarizability (1)
- Dielectric constant e of isotropic or cubic
medium w.r.t. vacuum is defined as - or
- Susceptibility ?
-
-
- Polarizability (a) of an atom is defined
- in terms of the local field P aEloc
-
- dipole ???? atom ??? local field
- moment polarizability
(atomic property) - Polairzation
-
- polarization dipole moment
- Relation between e and a
- microscopic ? local el.
field - macroscopic property
magnetic
or
1913.2 Dielectric Constant and Polarizability (2)
- relation of dielectric constant to a (related
to crystal structure)
2013.3 Structural Phase Transition
- Some of crystals usually transform from one
crystal structure to another as the T (??), P
(??), or external fields. - Exhibits an el. dipole moment even in the absence
of an el. field -
- ? hysteresis
- Piezoelectricity PZd?E
- (?? ??)
13.4 Ferroelectric Crystals
P?E
21Reference..
22Solid State Physics
Ch 14. Dielectrics and Ferroelectrics
Prof. J. Joo (jjoo_at_korea.ac.kr) Department of
Physics, Korea University http//smartpolymer.kore
a.ac.kr
2314.1 Introduction
- Money for magnet gt Money for semiconductor
- Magnetism Q.M.S.M.
- ?? 1 ?? ??
- 3 principal sources of the mag. Moment of a free
atom - Electrons (spins)
- El. orbit angular momentum about the nucleus
- Change of the orbital moment induced by an
applied mag. Field - Magnetization M mag. moment per unit vol.
- ? (??) P polarization
- Mag. susceptibility
- Molar susceptibility (?M) ? ?/mass or ?/mol
- Negative ? diamag.
- Positive ? paramag.
- Ordered arrays of mag. moments ferro - ,
ferri - , antiferro -
2414.2 Langevin Diamagnetism Eq. (1)
- Diamagnetism ? origin the magnetic field of the
induced current - is opposite to the applied field
-
- Mag. moment of el.
- ???? ????, Lorentz force ? ??
neucleus
Ze
e-
F0
??? ??
- Rotation of el. has been slowed down
- Reduction of freq. corresponding charge in mag.
field
2514.2 Langevin Diamagnetism Eq. (2)
- Consider Ze nucleus (Z electrons)
- Mag. moment
2614.3 Paramagnetism
- Electronic paramagnetism positive ?
- Atoms, molecules, and lattice defects possessing
and odd number of electrons total spin ? 0 - Free atoms and ions with a partially filled inner
shell transition elements, rare earth elements - Metals (except some of diamagnetic - )
2714.4 Quantum Theory of Paramagnetism
- Mag. moment
- Energy levels in a mag. field
- p.427 ltCrystal field splittinggt ?? 6 ??
spin
orbital