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Wiedemann–Franz law

In physics, the Wiedemann–Franz law states that the ratio of the electronic contribution of the thermal conductivity (κ) to the electrical conductivity (σ) of a metal is proportional to the temperature (T).[1]

Theoretically, the proportionality constant L, known as the Lorenz number, is equal to

where kB is Boltzmann's constant and e is the elementary charge.

This empirical law is named after Gustav Wiedemann and Rudolph Franz, who in 1853 reported that κ/σ has approximately the same value for different metals at the same temperature.[2] The proportionality of κ/σ with temperature was discovered by Ludvig Lorenz in 1872.

Derivation

 
Electric circuit with metal and a battery U. The arrows indicate the direction of the electric field E and the electric current density j.

Qualitatively, this relationship is based upon the fact that the heat and electrical transport both involve the free electrons in the metal.

The mathematical expression of the law can be derived as following. Electrical conduction of metals is a well-known phenomenon and is attributed to the free conduction electrons, which can be measured as sketched in the figure. The current density j is observed to be proportional to the applied electric field and follows Ohm's law where the prefactor is the specific electrical conductivity. Since the electric field and the current density are vectors Ohm's law is expressed here in bold face. The conductivity can in general be expressed as a tensor of the second rank (3×3 matrix). Here we restrict the discussion to isotropic, i.e. scalar conductivity. The specific resistivity is the inverse of the conductivity. Both parameters will be used in the following.

Drude model derivation

Paul Drude (c. 1900) realized that the phenomenological description of conductivity can be formulated quite generally (electron-, ion-, heat- etc. conductivity). Although the phenomenological description is incorrect for conduction electrons, it can serve as a preliminary treatment.

The assumption is that the electrons move freely in the solid like in an ideal gas. The force applied to the electron by the electric field leads to an acceleration according to

 
 

This would lead, however, to a constant acceleration and, ultimately, to an infinite velocity. The further assumption therefore is that the electrons bump into obstacles (like defects or phonons) once in a while which limits their free flight. This establishes an average or drift velocity Vd. The drift velocity is related to the average scattering time as becomes evident from the following relations.

 

From kinetic theory of gases,  , where   is the specific heat capacity as per Dulong–Petit law,   is the mean free path and   is the average speed of electrons; From Drude model,  .

Therefore,  , which is the Wiedemann–Franz law with an erroneous proportionality constant  ;

Free electron model

After taking into account the quantum effects, as in the free electron model, the heat capacity, mean free path and average speed of electrons are modified and the proportionality constant is then corrected to  , which agrees with experimental values.

Temperature dependence

The value L0 = 2.44×10−8 V2K−2 results from the fact that at low temperatures (  K) the heat and charge currents are carried by the same quasi-particles: electrons or holes. At finite temperatures two mechanisms produce a deviation of the ratio   from the theoretical Lorenz value L0: (i) other thermal carriers such as phonon or magnons, (ii) Inelastic scattering. As the temperature tends to 0K, inelastic scattering becomes weak and promotes large q scattering values (trajectory a in the figure). For each electron transported a thermal excitation is also carried and the Lorenz number is reached L = L0. Note that in a perfect metal, inelastic scattering would be completely absent in the limit   K and the thermal conductivity would vanish  . At finite temperature small q scattering values are possible (trajectory b in the figure) and electron can be transported without the transport of a thermal excitation L(T) < L0. At higher temperatures, the contribution of phonon to thermal transport in a system becomes important. This can lead to L(T) > L0. Above the Debye temperature the phonon contribution to thermal transport is constant and the ratio L(T) is again found constant.

 
Sketch of the various scattering process important for the Wiedemann–Franz law.

[3][4]

Limitations of the theory

Experiments have shown that the value of L, while roughly constant, is not exactly the same for all materials. Kittel[5] gives some values of L ranging from L = 2.23×10−8V2K−2 for copper at 0 °C to L = 3.2×10−8V2K−2 for tungsten at 100 °C. Rosenberg[6] notes that the Wiedemann–Franz law is generally valid for high temperatures and for low (i.e., a few Kelvins) temperatures, but may not hold at intermediate temperatures.

In many high purity metals both the electrical and thermal conductivities rise as temperature is decreased. In certain materials (such as silver or aluminum) however, the value of L also may decrease with temperature. In the purest samples of silver and at very low temperatures, L can drop by as much as a factor of 10.[7]

In degenerate semiconductors, the Lorenz number L has a strong dependency on certain system parameters: dimensionality, strength of interatomic interactions and Fermi level. This law is not valid or the value of the Lorenz number can be reduced at least in the following cases: manipulating electronic density of states, varying doping density and layer thickness in superlattices and materials with correlated carriers. In thermoelectric materials there are also corrections due to boundary conditions, specifically open circuit vs. closed circuit. [8][9][10]

Violations

In 2011, N. Wakeham et al. found that the ratio of the thermal and electrical Hall conductivities in the metallic phase of quasi-one-dimensional lithium molybdenum purple bronze Li0.9Mo6O17 diverges with decreasing temperature, reaching a value five orders of magnitude larger than that found in conventional metals obeying the Wiedemann–Franz law.[11][12] This due to spin-charge separation and it behaving as a Luttinger liquid.[11]

A Berkeley-led study in 2016 by S. Lee et al. also found a large violation of the Wiedemann–Franz law near the insulator-metal transition in VO2 nanobeams. In the metallic phase, the electronic contribution to thermal conductivity was much smaller than what would be expected from the Wiedemann–Franz law. The results can be explained in terms of independent propagation of charge and heat in a strongly correlated system.[13][14]

Molecular systems

In 2020, Galen Craven and Abraham Nitzan derived a Wiedemann-Franz law for molecular systems in which electronic conduction is dominated not by free electron motion as in metals, but instead by electron transfer between molecular sites.[15] The molecular Wiedemann-Franz law is given by

 

where

 

is the Lorenz number for molecules and   is the reorganization energy for electron transfer.

See also

References

  1. ^ Jones, William; March, Norman H. (1985). Theoretical Solid State Physics. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-65016-6.
  2. ^ Franz, R.; Wiedemann, G. (1853). "Ueber die Wärme-Leitungsfähigkeit der Metalle". Annalen der Physik (in German). 165 (8): 497–531. Bibcode:1853AnP...165..497F. doi:10.1002/andp.18531650802.
  3. ^ Mizutani, Uichiro (2003). Introduction to the Electron Theory of Metals. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. ISBN 9780511612626.
  4. ^ Thermal conductivity: theory, properties, and applications, edited by Terry Tritt, Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers, New York (2004), ISBN 978-0-387-26017-4
  5. ^ Kittel, C., 2005. Introduction to Solid State Physics. John Wiley and Sons
  6. ^ Rosenberg, H. 2004. The Solid State. Oxford University Press
  7. ^ K. Gloos, C. Mitschka, F. Pobell and P. Smeibidl. Cryogenics, 30 (1990), p. 14, doi:10.1016/0011-2275(90)90107-N
  8. ^ A. J. Minnich, M. S. Dresselhaus, Z. F. Ren and G. Chen. Bulk nanostructured thermoelectric materials: current research and future prospects, Energy & Environmental Science, 2009, 2, 466–479, doi:10.1039/b822664b
  9. ^ A. Putatunda and D.J. Singh. Lorenz number in relation to estimates based on the Seebeck coefficient, Materials Today Physics, 2019, 8, 49-55, doi:10.1016/j.mtphys.2019.01.001
  10. ^ Paothep Pichanusakorn, Prabhakar Bandaru. Nanostructured thermoelectrics, Materials Science and Engineering: R: Reports, Volume 67, Issues 2–4, 29 January 2010, pages 19–63, ISSN 0927-796X, doi:10.1016/j.mser.2009.10.001.
  11. ^ a b Wakeham, Nicholas; Bangura, Alimamy F.; Xu, Xiaofeng; Mercure, Jean-Francois; Greenblatt, Martha; Hussey, Nigel E. (2011-07-19). "Gross violation of the Wiedemann–Franz law in a quasi-one-dimensional conductor". Nature Communications. 2: 396. Bibcode:2011NatCo...2..396W. doi:10.1038/ncomms1406. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 3144592. PMID 21772267.
  12. ^ "Bristol physicists break 150-year-old law". Retrieved 2017-01-28.
  13. ^ Lee, Sangwook; Hippalgaonkar, Kedar; Yang, Fan; Hong, Jiawang; Ko, Changhyun; Suh, Joonki; Liu, Kai; Wang, Kevin; Urban, Jeffrey J. (2017-01-27). "Anomalously low electronic thermal conductivity in metallic vanadium dioxide" (PDF). Science. 355 (6323): 371–374. Bibcode:2017Sci...355..371L. doi:10.1126/science.aag0410. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 28126811.
  14. ^ Yang, Sarah (2017-01-26). "For This Metal, Electricity Flows, But Not the Heat | Berkeley Lab". News Center. Retrieved 2017-01-28.
  15. ^ Craven, Galen T.; Nitzan, Abraham (2020-02-12). "Wiedemann–Franz Law for Molecular Hopping Transport". Nano Letters. 20 (2): 989–993. arXiv:1909.06220. doi:10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04070. ISSN 1530-6984.

wiedemann, franz, physics, states, that, ratio, electronic, contribution, thermal, conductivity, electrical, conductivity, metal, proportional, temperature, displaystyle, frac, kappa, sigma, theoretically, proportionality, constant, known, lorenz, number, equa. In physics the Wiedemann Franz law states that the ratio of the electronic contribution of the thermal conductivity k to the electrical conductivity s of a metal is proportional to the temperature T 1 k s L T displaystyle frac kappa sigma LT Theoretically the proportionality constant L known as the Lorenz number is equal to L k s T p 2 3 k B e 2 2 44 10 8 V 2 K 2 displaystyle L frac kappa sigma T frac pi 2 3 left frac k rm B e right 2 2 44 times 10 8 mathrm V 2 mathrm K 2 where kB is Boltzmann s constant and e is the elementary charge This empirical law is named after Gustav Wiedemann and Rudolph Franz who in 1853 reported that k s has approximately the same value for different metals at the same temperature 2 The proportionality of k s with temperature was discovered by Ludvig Lorenz in 1872 Contents 1 Derivation 1 1 Drude model derivation 1 2 Free electron model 2 Temperature dependence 3 Limitations of the theory 4 Violations 5 Molecular systems 6 See also 7 ReferencesDerivation Edit Electric circuit with metal and a battery U The arrows indicate the direction of the electric field E and the electric current density j Qualitatively this relationship is based upon the fact that the heat and electrical transport both involve the free electrons in the metal The mathematical expression of the law can be derived as following Electrical conduction of metals is a well known phenomenon and is attributed to the free conduction electrons which can be measured as sketched in the figure The current density j is observed to be proportional to the applied electric field and follows Ohm s law where the prefactor is the specific electrical conductivity Since the electric field and the current density are vectors Ohm s law is expressed here in bold face The conductivity can in general be expressed as a tensor of the second rank 3 3 matrix Here we restrict the discussion to isotropic i e scalar conductivity The specific resistivity is the inverse of the conductivity Both parameters will be used in the following Drude model derivation Edit Paul Drude c 1900 realized that the phenomenological description of conductivity can be formulated quite generally electron ion heat etc conductivity Although the phenomenological description is incorrect for conduction electrons it can serve as a preliminary treatment The assumption is that the electrons move freely in the solid like in an ideal gas The force applied to the electron by the electric field leads to an acceleration according to F e E m d v d t displaystyle mathbf F e mathbf E m frac d mathbf v dt d v e E m d t displaystyle d mathbf v frac e mathbf E m dt This would lead however to a constant acceleration and ultimately to an infinite velocity The further assumption therefore is that the electrons bump into obstacles like defects or phonons once in a while which limits their free flight This establishes an average or drift velocity Vd The drift velocity is related to the average scattering time as becomes evident from the following relations d v d t e E m 1 t v displaystyle frac d mathbf v dt frac e mathbf E m frac 1 tau mathbf v From kinetic theory of gases k 1 3 c V m n ℓ v displaystyle kappa frac 1 3 c V mn ell langle v rangle where c V 3 k B m displaystyle c V 3 frac k rm B m is the specific heat capacity as per Dulong Petit law ℓ displaystyle ell is the mean free path and v 8 k B T p m 8 3 p v r m s displaystyle langle v rangle sqrt frac 8k rm B T pi m sqrt frac 8 3 pi v rm rms is the average speed of electrons From Drude model s n e 2 t m n e 2 ℓ m v displaystyle sigma frac ne 2 tau m frac ne 2 ell m langle v rangle Therefore k s c V m 2 v 2 3 e 2 8 p k B 2 T e 2 displaystyle frac kappa sigma frac c V m 2 langle v rangle 2 3e 2 frac 8 pi frac k rm B 2 T e 2 which is the Wiedemann Franz law with an erroneous proportionality constant 8 p 2 55 displaystyle frac 8 pi approx 2 55 Free electron model Edit After taking into account the quantum effects as in the free electron model the heat capacity mean free path and average speed of electrons are modified and the proportionality constant is then corrected to p 2 3 3 29 displaystyle frac pi 2 3 approx 3 29 which agrees with experimental values Temperature dependence EditThe value L0 2 44 10 8 V2K 2 results from the fact that at low temperatures T 0 displaystyle T rightarrow 0 K the heat and charge currents are carried by the same quasi particles electrons or holes At finite temperatures two mechanisms produce a deviation of the ratio L k s T displaystyle L kappa sigma T from the theoretical Lorenz value L0 i other thermal carriers such as phonon or magnons ii Inelastic scattering As the temperature tends to 0K inelastic scattering becomes weak and promotes large q scattering values trajectory a in the figure For each electron transported a thermal excitation is also carried and the Lorenz number is reached L L0 Note that in a perfect metal inelastic scattering would be completely absent in the limit T 0 displaystyle T rightarrow 0 K and the thermal conductivity would vanish k 0 L 0 displaystyle kappa rightarrow 0 L rightarrow 0 At finite temperature small q scattering values are possible trajectory b in the figure and electron can be transported without the transport of a thermal excitation L T lt L0 At higher temperatures the contribution of phonon to thermal transport in a system becomes important This can lead to L T gt L0 Above the Debye temperature the phonon contribution to thermal transport is constant and the ratio L T is again found constant Sketch of the various scattering process important for the Wiedemann Franz law 3 4 Limitations of the theory EditExperiments have shown that the value of L while roughly constant is not exactly the same for all materials Kittel 5 gives some values of L ranging from L 2 23 10 8V2K 2 for copper at 0 C to L 3 2 10 8V2K 2 for tungsten at 100 C Rosenberg 6 notes that the Wiedemann Franz law is generally valid for high temperatures and for low i e a few Kelvins temperatures but may not hold at intermediate temperatures In many high purity metals both the electrical and thermal conductivities rise as temperature is decreased In certain materials such as silver or aluminum however the value of L also may decrease with temperature In the purest samples of silver and at very low temperatures L can drop by as much as a factor of 10 7 In degenerate semiconductors the Lorenz number L has a strong dependency on certain system parameters dimensionality strength of interatomic interactions and Fermi level This law is not valid or the value of the Lorenz number can be reduced at least in the following cases manipulating electronic density of states varying doping density and layer thickness in superlattices and materials with correlated carriers In thermoelectric materials there are also corrections due to boundary conditions specifically open circuit vs closed circuit 8 9 10 Violations EditIn 2011 N Wakeham et al found that the ratio of the thermal and electrical Hall conductivities in the metallic phase of quasi one dimensional lithium molybdenum purple bronze Li0 9Mo6O17 diverges with decreasing temperature reaching a value five orders of magnitude larger than that found in conventional metals obeying the Wiedemann Franz law 11 12 This due to spin charge separation and it behaving as a Luttinger liquid 11 A Berkeley led study in 2016 by S Lee et al also found a large violation of the Wiedemann Franz law near the insulator metal transition in VO2 nanobeams In the metallic phase the electronic contribution to thermal conductivity was much smaller than what would be expected from the Wiedemann Franz law The results can be explained in terms of independent propagation of charge and heat in a strongly correlated system 13 14 Molecular systems EditIn 2020 Galen Craven and Abraham Nitzan derived a Wiedemann Franz law for molecular systems in which electronic conduction is dominated not by free electron motion as in metals but instead by electron transfer between molecular sites 15 The molecular Wiedemann Franz law is given by k s L M l k B displaystyle frac kappa sigma L text M frac lambda k rm B where L M 1 2 k B e 2 displaystyle L text M frac 1 2 left frac k rm B e right 2 is the Lorenz number for molecules and l displaystyle lambda is the reorganization energy for electron transfer See also EditDrude modelReferences Edit Jones William March Norman H 1985 Theoretical Solid State Physics Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 65016 6 Franz R Wiedemann G 1853 Ueber die Warme Leitungsfahigkeit der Metalle Annalen der Physik in German 165 8 497 531 Bibcode 1853AnP 165 497F doi 10 1002 andp 18531650802 Mizutani Uichiro 2003 Introduction to the Electron Theory of Metals CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS ISBN 9780511612626 Thermal conductivity theory properties and applications edited by Terry Tritt Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers New York 2004 ISBN 978 0 387 26017 4 Kittel C 2005 Introduction to Solid State Physics John Wiley and Sons Rosenberg H 2004 The Solid State Oxford University Press K Gloos C Mitschka F Pobell and P Smeibidl Cryogenics 30 1990 p 14 doi 10 1016 0011 2275 90 90107 N A J Minnich M S Dresselhaus Z F Ren and G Chen Bulk nanostructured thermoelectric materials current research and future prospects Energy amp Environmental Science 2009 2 466 479 doi 10 1039 b822664b A Putatunda and D J Singh Lorenz number in relation to estimates based on the Seebeck coefficient Materials Today Physics 2019 8 49 55 doi 10 1016 j mtphys 2019 01 001 Paothep Pichanusakorn Prabhakar Bandaru Nanostructured thermoelectrics Materials Science and Engineering R Reports Volume 67 Issues 2 4 29 January 2010 pages 19 63 ISSN 0927 796X doi 10 1016 j mser 2009 10 001 a b Wakeham Nicholas Bangura Alimamy F Xu Xiaofeng Mercure Jean Francois Greenblatt Martha Hussey Nigel E 2011 07 19 Gross violation of the Wiedemann Franz law in a quasi one dimensional conductor Nature Communications 2 396 Bibcode 2011NatCo 2 396W doi 10 1038 ncomms1406 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 3144592 PMID 21772267 Bristol physicists break 150 year old law Retrieved 2017 01 28 Lee Sangwook Hippalgaonkar Kedar Yang Fan Hong Jiawang Ko Changhyun Suh Joonki Liu Kai Wang Kevin Urban Jeffrey J 2017 01 27 Anomalously low electronic thermal conductivity in metallic vanadium dioxide PDF Science 355 6323 371 374 Bibcode 2017Sci 355 371L doi 10 1126 science aag0410 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 28126811 Yang Sarah 2017 01 26 For This Metal Electricity Flows But Not the Heat Berkeley Lab News Center Retrieved 2017 01 28 Craven Galen T Nitzan Abraham 2020 02 12 Wiedemann Franz Law for Molecular Hopping Transport Nano Letters 20 2 989 993 arXiv 1909 06220 doi 10 1021 acs nanolett 9b04070 ISSN 1530 6984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wiedemann Franz law amp oldid 1122199854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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