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Fermi-Dirac Distribution Function: Figure 2.5.1: The Fermi Function at Three Different Temperatures

The Fermi-Dirac distribution function provides the probability that energy levels are occupied by fermions like electrons. Fermions obey the Pauli exclusion principle where only one fermion can occupy a quantum state, so they fill available energy states from lowest to highest just as water fills a bucket. At absolute zero, states are filled up to the Fermi level, with nothing above filled. At higher temperatures, the transition between full and empty states becomes gradual. The function gives the probability an energy level E is occupied by an electron in thermal equilibrium, characterized by temperature T and Fermi energy EF.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
99 views1 page

Fermi-Dirac Distribution Function: Figure 2.5.1: The Fermi Function at Three Different Temperatures

The Fermi-Dirac distribution function provides the probability that energy levels are occupied by fermions like electrons. Fermions obey the Pauli exclusion principle where only one fermion can occupy a quantum state, so they fill available energy states from lowest to highest just as water fills a bucket. At absolute zero, states are filled up to the Fermi level, with nothing above filled. At higher temperatures, the transition between full and empty states becomes gradual. The function gives the probability an energy level E is occupied by an electron in thermal equilibrium, characterized by temperature T and Fermi energy EF.

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alokesh1982
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Fermi-Dirac distribution function

The Fermi-Dirac distribution function, also called Fermi function, provides the probability of occupancy of energy levels by Fermions. Fermions are half-integer spin particles, which obey the Pauli exclusion principle. The Pauli exclusion principle postulates that only one Fermion can occupy a single quantum state. Therefore, as Fermions are added to an energy band, they will fill the available states in an energy band just like water fills a bucket. The states with the lowest energy are filled first, followed by the next higher ones. At absolute zero temperature (T = 0 K), the energy levels are all filled up to a maximum energy, which we call the Fermi level. No states above the Fermi level are filled. At higher temperature, one finds that the transition between completely filled states and completely empty states is gradual rather than abrupt. Electrons are Fermions. Therefore, the Fermi function provides the probability that an energy level at energy, E, in thermal equilibrium with a large system, is occupied by an electron. The system is characterized by its temperature, T, and its Fermi energy, EF. The Fermi function is given by:

This function is plotted in Figure at 150, 300 and 600 K.

Figure 2.5.1 : The Fermi function at three different temperatures.

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