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Electronic specific heat

In solid state physics the electronic specific heat, sometimes called the electron heat capacity, is the specific heat of an electron gas. Heat is transported by phonons and by free electrons in solids. For pure metals, however, the electronic contributions dominate in the thermal conductivity.[citation needed] In impure metals, the electron mean free path is reduced by collisions with impurities, and the phonon contribution may be comparable with the electronic contribution.[citation needed]

Introduction

Although the Drude model was fairly successful in describing the electron motion within metals, it has some erroneous aspects: it predicts the Hall coefficient with the wrong sign compared to experimental measurements, the assumed additional electronic heat capacity to the lattice heat capacity, namely   per electron at elevated temperatures, is also inconsistent with experimental values, since measurements of metals show no deviation from the Dulong–Petit law. The observed electronic contribution of electrons to the heat capacity is usually less than one percent of  . This problem seemed insoluble prior to the development of quantum mechanics. This paradox was solved by Arnold Sommerfeld after the discovery of the Pauli exclusion principle, who recognised that the replacement of the Boltzmann distribution with the Fermi–Dirac distribution was required and incorporated it in the free electron model.

Derivation within the free electron model

Internal energy

When a metallic system is heated from absolute zero, not every electron gains an energy   as equipartition dictates. Only those electrons in atomic orbitals within an energy range of   of the Fermi level are thermally excited. Electrons, in contrast to a classical gas, can only move into free states in their energetic neighbourhood. The one-electron energy levels are specified by the wave vector   through the relation   with   the electron mass. This relation separates the occupied energy states from the unoccupied ones and corresponds to the spherical surface in k-space. As   the ground state distribution becomes:

 

where

  •   is the Fermi–Dirac distribution
  •   is the energy of the energy level corresponding to the ground state
  •   is the ground state energy in the limit  , which thus still deviates from the true ground state energy.

This implies that the ground state is the only occupied state for electrons in the limit  , the   takes the Pauli exclusion principle into account. The internal energy   of a system within the free electron model is given by the sum over one-electron levels times the mean number of electrons in that level:

 

where the factor of 2 accounts for the spin up and spin down states of the electron.

Reduced internal energy and electron density

Using the approximation that for a sum over a smooth function   over all allowed values of   for finite large system is given by:

 

where   is the volume of the system.

For the reduced internal energy   the expression for   can be rewritten as:

 

and the expression for the electron density   can be written as:

 

The integrals above can be evaluated using the fact that the dependence of the integrals on   can be changed to dependence on   through the relation for the electronic energy when described as free particles,  , which yields for an arbitrary function  :

 

with   which is known as the density of levels or density of states per unit volume such that   is the total number of states between   and   . Using the expressions above the integrals can be rewritten as:

 

These integrals can be evaluated for temperatures that are small compared to the Fermi temperature by applying the Sommerfeld expansion and using the approximation that   differs from   for   by terms of order  . The expressions become:

 

For the ground state configuration the first terms (the integrals) of the expressions above yield the internal energy and electron density of the ground state. The expression for the electron density reduces to  . Substituting this into the expression for the internal energy, one finds the following expression:

 

Final expression

The contributions of electrons within the free electron model is given by:

 , for free electrons :  

Compared to the classical result ( ), it can be concluded that this result is depressed by a factor of   which is at room temperature of order of magnitude  . This explains the absence of an electronic contribution to the heat capacity as measured experimentally.

Note that in this derivation   is often denoted by   which is known as the Fermi energy. In this notation, the electron heat capacity becomes:

  and for free electrons :   using the definition for the Fermi energy with   the Fermi temperature.

Comparison with experimental results for the heat capacity of metals

For temperatures below both the Debye temperature   and the Fermi temperature   the heat capacity of metals can be written as a sum of electron and phonon contributions that are linear and cubic respectively:  . The coefficient   can be calculated and determined experimentally. We report this value below:[1]

Species Free electron value for   in   Experimental value for   in  
Li 0.749 1.63
Be 0.500 0.17
Na 1.094 1.38
Mg 0.992 1.3
Al 0.912 1.35
K 1.668 2.08
Ca 1.511 2.9
Cu 0.505 0.695
Zn 0.753 0.64
Ga 1.025 0.596
Rb 1.911 2.41
Sr 1.790 3.6
Ag 0.645 0.646
Cd 0.948 0.688
In 1.233 1.69
Sn 1.410 1.78
Cs 2.238 3.20
Ba 1.937 2.7
Au 0.642 0.729
Hg 0.952 1.79
Ti 1.29 1.47
Pb 1.509 2.98

The free electrons in a metal do not usually lead to a strong deviation from the Dulong–Petit law at high temperatures. Since   is linear in   and   is linear in  , at low temperatures the lattice contribution vanishes faster than the electronic contribution and the latter can be measured. The deviation of the approximated and experimentally determined electronic contribution to the heat capacity of a metal is not too large. A few metals deviate significantly from this approximated prediction. Measurements indicate that these errors are associated with the electron mass being somehow changed in the metal, for the calculation of the electron heat capacity the effective mass of an electron should be considered instead. For Fe and Co the large deviations are attributed to the partially filled d-shells of these transition metals, whose d-bands lie at the Fermi energy. The alkali metals are expected to have the best agreement with the free electron model since these metals only one s-electron outside a closed shell. However even sodium, which is considered to be the closest to a free electron metal, is determined to have a   more than 25 per cent higher than expected from the theory.

Certain effects influence the deviation from the approximation:

  • The interaction of the conduction electrons with the periodic potential of the rigid crystal lattice is neglected.
  • The interaction of the conduction electrons with phonons is also neglected. This interaction causes changes in the effective mass of the electron and therefore it affects the electron energy.
  • The interaction of the conduction electrons with themselves is also ignored. A moving electron causes an inertial reaction in the surrounding electron gas.

Superconductors

Superconductivity occurs in many metallic elements of the periodic system and also in alloys, intermetallic compounds, and doped semiconductors. This effect occurs upon cooling the material. The entropy decreases on cooling below the critical temperature   for superconductivity which indicates that the superconducting state is more ordered than the normal state. The entropy change is small, this must mean that only a very small fraction of electrons participate in the transition to the superconducting state but, the electronic contribution to the heat capacity changes drastically. There is a sharp jump of the heat capacity at the critical temperature while for the temperatures above the critical temperature the heat capacity is linear with temperature.

Derivation

The calculation of the electron heat capacity for super conductors can be done in the BCS theory. The entropy of a system of fermionic quasiparticles, in this case Cooper pairs, is:

 

where   is the Fermi–Dirac distribution   with   and

  •   is the particle energy with respect to the Fermi energy
  •   the energy gap parameter where   and   represents the probability that a Cooper pair is occupied or unoccupied respectively.

The heat capacity is given by  . The last two terms can be calculated:

 

Substituting this in the expression for the heat capacity and again applying that the sum over   in the reciprocal space can be replaced by an integral in   multiplied by the density of states   this yields:

 

Characteristic behaviour for superconductors

To examine the typical behaviour of the electron heat capacity for species that can transition to the superconducting state, three regions must be defined:

  1. Above the critical temperature  
  2. At the critical temperature  
  3. Below the critical temperature  

Superconductors at T > T c

For   it holds that   and the electron heat capacity becomes:

 

This is just the result for a normal metal derived in the section above, as expected since a superconductor behaves as a normal conductor above the critical temperature.

Superconductors at T < T c

For   the electron heat capacity for super conductors exhibits an exponential decay of the form:  

Superconductors at T = T c

At the critical temperature the heat capacity is discontinuous. This discontinuity in the heat capacity indicates that the transition for a material from normal conducting to superconducting is a second order phase transition.

See also

References

  1. ^ Kittel, Charles (2005). Introduction to Solid State Physics (8 ed.). United States of America: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-471-41526-8.

General references:

electronic, specific, heat, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, february, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, templat. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs attention from an expert in physics The specific problem is misuse of terminology WikiProject Physics may be able to help recruit an expert February 2019 In solid state physics the electronic specific heat sometimes called the electron heat capacity is the specific heat of an electron gas Heat is transported by phonons and by free electrons in solids For pure metals however the electronic contributions dominate in the thermal conductivity citation needed In impure metals the electron mean free path is reduced by collisions with impurities and the phonon contribution may be comparable with the electronic contribution citation needed Contents 1 Introduction 2 Derivation within the free electron model 2 1 Internal energy 2 2 Reduced internal energy and electron density 2 3 Final expression 3 Comparison with experimental results for the heat capacity of metals 4 Superconductors 4 1 Derivation 4 2 Characteristic behaviour for superconductors 4 2 1 Superconductors at T gt T c 4 2 2 Superconductors at T lt T c 4 2 3 Superconductors at T T c 5 See also 6 ReferencesIntroduction EditAlthough the Drude model was fairly successful in describing the electron motion within metals it has some erroneous aspects it predicts the Hall coefficient with the wrong sign compared to experimental measurements the assumed additional electronic heat capacity to the lattice heat capacity namely 3 2 k B displaystyle tfrac 3 2 k rm B per electron at elevated temperatures is also inconsistent with experimental values since measurements of metals show no deviation from the Dulong Petit law The observed electronic contribution of electrons to the heat capacity is usually less than one percent of 3 2 k B displaystyle tfrac 3 2 k rm B This problem seemed insoluble prior to the development of quantum mechanics This paradox was solved by Arnold Sommerfeld after the discovery of the Pauli exclusion principle who recognised that the replacement of the Boltzmann distribution with the Fermi Dirac distribution was required and incorporated it in the free electron model Derivation within the free electron model EditThis section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions November 2020 Internal energy Edit When a metallic system is heated from absolute zero not every electron gains an energy k B T displaystyle k rm B T as equipartition dictates Only those electrons in atomic orbitals within an energy range of 3 2 k B T displaystyle tfrac 3 2 k rm B T of the Fermi level are thermally excited Electrons in contrast to a classical gas can only move into free states in their energetic neighbourhood The one electron energy levels are specified by the wave vector k displaystyle k through the relation ϵ k ℏ 2 k 2 2 m displaystyle epsilon k hbar 2 k 2 2m with m displaystyle m the electron mass This relation separates the occupied energy states from the unoccupied ones and corresponds to the spherical surface in k space As T 0 displaystyle T rightarrow 0 the ground state distribution becomes f 1 if ϵ f lt m 0 if ϵ f gt m displaystyle f begin cases 1 amp mbox if epsilon f lt mu 0 amp mbox if epsilon f gt mu end cases where f displaystyle f is the Fermi Dirac distribution ϵ f displaystyle epsilon f is the energy of the energy level corresponding to the ground state m displaystyle mu is the ground state energy in the limit T 0 displaystyle T rightarrow 0 which thus still deviates from the true ground state energy This implies that the ground state is the only occupied state for electrons in the limit T 0 displaystyle T rightarrow 0 the f 1 displaystyle f 1 takes the Pauli exclusion principle into account The internal energy U displaystyle U of a system within the free electron model is given by the sum over one electron levels times the mean number of electrons in that level U 2 k ϵ k f ϵ k displaystyle U 2 sum k epsilon mathbf k f epsilon mathbf k where the factor of 2 accounts for the spin up and spin down states of the electron Reduced internal energy and electron density Edit Using the approximation that for a sum over a smooth function F k displaystyle F k over all allowed values of k displaystyle k for finite large system is given by F k V 8 p 3 k F k D k displaystyle F mathbf k frac V 8 pi 3 sum k F mathbf k Delta mathbf k where V displaystyle V is the volume of the system For the reduced internal energy u U V displaystyle u U V the expression for U displaystyle U can be rewritten as u d k 4 p 3 ϵ k f ϵ k displaystyle u int frac d mathbf k 4 pi 3 epsilon mathbf k f epsilon mathbf k and the expression for the electron density n N V displaystyle n frac N V can be written as n d k 4 p 3 f ϵ k displaystyle n int frac d mathbf k 4 pi 3 f epsilon mathbf k The integrals above can be evaluated using the fact that the dependence of the integrals on k displaystyle mathbf k can be changed to dependence on ϵ displaystyle epsilon through the relation for the electronic energy when described as free particles ϵ k ℏ 2 k 2 2 m displaystyle epsilon k hbar 2 k 2 2m which yields for an arbitrary function G displaystyle G d k 4 p 3 G ϵ k 0 k 2 d k p 2 G ϵ k d ϵ D ϵ G ϵ displaystyle int frac d mathbf k 4 pi 3 G epsilon mathbf k int 0 infty frac k 2 dk pi 2 G epsilon mathbf k int infty infty d epsilon D epsilon G epsilon with D ϵ m ℏ 2 p 2 2 m ϵ ℏ 2 if ϵ gt 0 0 if ϵ lt 0 displaystyle D epsilon begin cases frac m hbar 2 pi 2 sqrt frac 2m epsilon hbar 2 amp mbox if epsilon gt 0 0 amp mbox if epsilon lt 0 end cases which is known as the density of levels or density of states per unit volume such that D ϵ d ϵ displaystyle D epsilon d epsilon is the total number of states between ϵ displaystyle epsilon and ϵ d ϵ displaystyle epsilon d epsilon Using the expressions above the integrals can be rewritten as u d ϵ D ϵ ϵ f ϵ n d ϵ D ϵ f ϵ displaystyle begin aligned u amp int infty infty d epsilon D epsilon epsilon f epsilon n amp int infty infty d epsilon D epsilon f epsilon end aligned These integrals can be evaluated for temperatures that are small compared to the Fermi temperature by applying the Sommerfeld expansion and using the approximation that m displaystyle mu differs from ϵ f displaystyle epsilon f for T 0 displaystyle T 0 by terms of order T 2 displaystyle T 2 The expressions become u 0 ϵ f ϵ D ϵ d ϵ ϵ f m ϵ f D ϵ f p 2 6 k B T 2 D ϵ f p 2 6 k B T 2 D ϵ f O T 4 n 0 ϵ f D ϵ d ϵ m ϵ f D ϵ f p 2 6 k B T 2 D ϵ f displaystyle begin aligned u amp int 0 epsilon f epsilon D epsilon d epsilon epsilon f left mu epsilon f D epsilon f frac pi 2 6 k rm B T 2 dot D epsilon f right frac pi 2 6 k rm B T 2 D epsilon f mathcal O T 4 n amp int 0 epsilon f D epsilon d epsilon left mu epsilon f D epsilon f frac pi 2 6 k rm B T 2 dot D epsilon f right end aligned For the ground state configuration the first terms the integrals of the expressions above yield the internal energy and electron density of the ground state The expression for the electron density reduces to m ϵ f D ϵ f p 2 6 k B T 2 D ϵ f 0 displaystyle mu epsilon f D epsilon f frac pi 2 6 k rm B T 2 dot D epsilon f 0 Substituting this into the expression for the internal energy one finds the following expression u u 0 p 2 6 k B T 2 D ϵ f displaystyle u u 0 frac pi 2 6 k rm B T 2 D epsilon f Final expression Edit The contributions of electrons within the free electron model is given by C v u T n p 2 3 k B 2 T D ϵ f displaystyle C v left frac partial u partial T right n frac pi 2 3 k rm B 2 TD epsilon f for free electrons C V C v n p 2 2 k B 2 T ϵ f displaystyle C V C v n frac pi 2 2 frac k rm B 2 T epsilon f Compared to the classical result C V 3 2 k B displaystyle C V tfrac 3 2 k rm B it can be concluded that this result is depressed by a factor of p 2 3 k B T ϵ f displaystyle frac pi 2 3 frac k rm B T epsilon f which is at room temperature of order of magnitude 10 2 displaystyle 10 2 This explains the absence of an electronic contribution to the heat capacity as measured experimentally Note that in this derivation ϵ f displaystyle epsilon f is often denoted by E F displaystyle E rm F which is known as the Fermi energy In this notation the electron heat capacity becomes C v p 2 3 k B 2 T D E F displaystyle C v frac pi 2 3 k rm B 2 TD E rm F and for free electrons C V p 2 2 k B k B T E F p 2 2 k B T T F displaystyle C V frac pi 2 2 k rm B left frac k rm B T E rm F right frac pi 2 2 k rm B left frac T T rm F right using the definition for the Fermi energy with T F displaystyle T rm F the Fermi temperature Comparison with experimental results for the heat capacity of metals EditFor temperatures below both the Debye temperature T D displaystyle T rm D and the Fermi temperature T F displaystyle T rm F the heat capacity of metals can be written as a sum of electron and phonon contributions that are linear and cubic respectively C V g T A T 3 displaystyle C V gamma T AT 3 The coefficient g displaystyle gamma can be calculated and determined experimentally We report this value below 1 Species Free electron value for g displaystyle gamma in m J m o l 1 K 2 displaystyle rm mJ mol 1 K 2 Experimental value for g displaystyle gamma in m J m o l 1 K 2 displaystyle rm mJ mol 1 K 2 Li 0 749 1 63Be 0 500 0 17Na 1 094 1 38Mg 0 992 1 3Al 0 912 1 35K 1 668 2 08Ca 1 511 2 9Cu 0 505 0 695Zn 0 753 0 64Ga 1 025 0 596Rb 1 911 2 41Sr 1 790 3 6Ag 0 645 0 646Cd 0 948 0 688In 1 233 1 69Sn 1 410 1 78Cs 2 238 3 20Ba 1 937 2 7Au 0 642 0 729Hg 0 952 1 79Ti 1 29 1 47Pb 1 509 2 98The free electrons in a metal do not usually lead to a strong deviation from the Dulong Petit law at high temperatures Since g displaystyle gamma is linear in T displaystyle T and A displaystyle A is linear in T 3 displaystyle T 3 at low temperatures the lattice contribution vanishes faster than the electronic contribution and the latter can be measured The deviation of the approximated and experimentally determined electronic contribution to the heat capacity of a metal is not too large A few metals deviate significantly from this approximated prediction Measurements indicate that these errors are associated with the electron mass being somehow changed in the metal for the calculation of the electron heat capacity the effective mass of an electron should be considered instead For Fe and Co the large deviations are attributed to the partially filled d shells of these transition metals whose d bands lie at the Fermi energy The alkali metals are expected to have the best agreement with the free electron model since these metals only one s electron outside a closed shell However even sodium which is considered to be the closest to a free electron metal is determined to have a g displaystyle gamma more than 25 per cent higher than expected from the theory Certain effects influence the deviation from the approximation The interaction of the conduction electrons with the periodic potential of the rigid crystal lattice is neglected The interaction of the conduction electrons with phonons is also neglected This interaction causes changes in the effective mass of the electron and therefore it affects the electron energy The interaction of the conduction electrons with themselves is also ignored A moving electron causes an inertial reaction in the surrounding electron gas Superconductors EditSuperconductivity occurs in many metallic elements of the periodic system and also in alloys intermetallic compounds and doped semiconductors This effect occurs upon cooling the material The entropy decreases on cooling below the critical temperature T c displaystyle T c for superconductivity which indicates that the superconducting state is more ordered than the normal state The entropy change is small this must mean that only a very small fraction of electrons participate in the transition to the superconducting state but the electronic contribution to the heat capacity changes drastically There is a sharp jump of the heat capacity at the critical temperature while for the temperatures above the critical temperature the heat capacity is linear with temperature Derivation Edit The calculation of the electron heat capacity for super conductors can be done in the BCS theory The entropy of a system of fermionic quasiparticles in this case Cooper pairs is S T 2 k B k f k ln f k 1 f k ln 1 f k displaystyle S T 2k rm B sum k f k ln f k 1 f k ln 1 f k where f k displaystyle f k is the Fermi Dirac distribution f k 1 e b w k 1 displaystyle f k frac 1 e beta omega k 1 with w k ϵ k 2 D k T 2 displaystyle omega k sqrt epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 and ϵ k E K m ℏ 2 k 2 2 m m displaystyle epsilon k E K mu hbar 2 mathbf k 2 2m mu is the particle energy with respect to the Fermi energy D k T k k u k v k displaystyle Delta k T sum kk u k v k the energy gap parameter where u k displaystyle u k and v k displaystyle v k represents the probability that a Cooper pair is occupied or unoccupied respectively The heat capacity is given by C v T T S T T T k S f k f k T displaystyle C v T T frac partial S T partial T T sum k frac partial S partial f k frac partial f k partial T The last two terms can be calculated S f k 2 k B ln f k 1 f k 2 1 T ϵ k 2 D k T 2 f k T 1 k B T 2 e b w k e b w k 1 2 ϵ k 2 D k T 2 T T ϵ k 2 D k T 2 displaystyle begin aligned frac partial S partial f k amp 2k rm B ln frac f k 1 f k 2 frac 1 T sqrt epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 frac partial f k partial T amp frac 1 k rm B T 2 frac e beta omega k e beta omega k 1 2 left sqrt epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 T frac partial partial T sqrt epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 right end aligned Substituting this in the expression for the heat capacity and again applying that the sum over k displaystyle mathbf k in the reciprocal space can be replaced by an integral in ϵ displaystyle epsilon multiplied by the density of states D E F displaystyle D E rm F this yields C v T 2 D E F k B T 2 e ϵ k 2 D k T 2 k B T e ϵ k 2 D k T 2 k B T 1 2 ϵ k 2 D k T 2 T 2 T D k T 2 d ϵ k displaystyle C v T frac 2D E rm F k rm B T 2 int infty infty left frac e frac sqrt epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 k rm B T e frac sqrt epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 k rm B T 1 2 left epsilon k 2 Delta k T 2 frac T 2 frac partial partial T Delta k T 2 right right d epsilon k Characteristic behaviour for superconductors Edit To examine the typical behaviour of the electron heat capacity for species that can transition to the superconducting state three regions must be defined Above the critical temperature T gt T c displaystyle T gt T c At the critical temperature T T c displaystyle T T c Below the critical temperature T lt T c displaystyle T lt T c Superconductors at T gt T c Edit For T gt T c displaystyle T gt T c it holds that D k T 0 displaystyle Delta k T 0 and the electron heat capacity becomes C v T 4 D E F k B T 2 e b ϵ e b ϵ 1 2 ϵ 2 d ϵ p 2 3 D E F k B 2 T displaystyle C v T frac 4D E rm F k rm B T 2 int infty infty frac e beta epsilon e beta epsilon 1 2 epsilon 2 d epsilon frac pi 2 3 D E rm F k rm B 2 T This is just the result for a normal metal derived in the section above as expected since a superconductor behaves as a normal conductor above the critical temperature Superconductors at T lt T c Edit For T lt T c displaystyle T lt T c the electron heat capacity for super conductors exhibits an exponential decay of the form C v T e b D k 0 displaystyle C v T approx e beta Delta k 0 Superconductors at T T c Edit At the critical temperature the heat capacity is discontinuous This discontinuity in the heat capacity indicates that the transition for a material from normal conducting to superconducting is a second order phase transition See also EditDrude model Fermi Dirac statistics Thermal effective mass Effective mass Superconductivity BCS theoryReferences Edit Kittel Charles 2005 Introduction to Solid State Physics 8 ed United States of America John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 146 ISBN 978 0 471 41526 8 General references Ashcroft N W Mermin N D 1976 Solid State Physics 1st ed Saunder ISBN 978 0030493461 Kittel Charles 1996 Introduction to Solid State Physics 7th ed Wiley ISBN 978 0471415268 Ibach Harald Luth Hans 2009 Solid State Physics An Introduction to Principles of Materials Science 1st ed Springer ISBN 978 3540938033 Grosso G Parravicini G P 2000 Solid State Physics 1st ed Academic Press ISBN 978 0123044600 Rosenberg H M 1963 Low temperature solid state physics some selected topics 1st ed Oxford at the Clarendon Press ISBN 978 1114116481 Hofmann P 2002 Solid State Physics 2nd ed Wiley ISBN 978 3527412822 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electronic specific heat amp oldid 1136833977, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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