Introduction To Solid State Physics

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SOLID STATE

PHYSICS

Prof. Omar Chmaissem

Note: This lecture is a condensed version extracted from several full-semester lectures
posted by Prof. Beşire Gönül , Turkey. http://www1.gantep.edu.tr/~bgonul/dersnotlari/ss/
What is solid state physics?

 Explains the properties of solid materials.

 Explains the properties of a collection of


atomic nuclei and electrons interacting with
electrostatic forces.

 Formulates fundamental laws that govern


the behavior of solids.
Crystalline Solids
 Crystalline materials are solids with an atomic
structure based on a regular repeated pattern.

 The majority of all solids are crystalline.

 More progress has been made in understanding the


behavior of crystalline solids than that of non-
crystalline materials since the calculation are easier
in crystalline materials.

 Understanding the electrical properties of solids is


right at the heart of modern society and technology.
Electrical resistivity of
three solid Carbon states
 How can this be? After all, they each contain a system
of atoms and especially electrons of similar density. And
the plot thickens: graphite is a metal, diamond is an
insulator and buckminster-fullerene is a superconductor.

They are all just carbon!


LECTURE’S OUTLINE

 Part 1. Crystal Structures


 Part 2. Interatomic Forces
 Part 3. Crystal Dynamics
PART 1
CRYSTAL STRUCTURES
 Elementary Crystallography
 Solid materials (crystalline, polycrystalline,
amorphous)
 Crystallography
 Crystal Lattice
 Crystal Structure
 Types of Lattices
 Unit Cell

 Typical Crystal Structures


(3D– 14 Bravais Lattices and the Seven Crystal System)
7
CLASSIFICATION OF SOLIDS

SOLID MATERIALS

AMORPHOUS
CRYSTALLINE POLYCRYSTALLINE
(Non-crystalline)

Single Crystal

Crystal Structure 8
SINGLE CRYSTALS
 Single crystals have a periodic atomic structure across its
whole volume.
 At long range length scales, each atom is related to every
other equivalent atom in the structure by translational or
rotational symmetry

Single Pyrite
Crystal

Amorphous
Solid
Single Crystals
9
POLYCRYSTALLINE SOLIDS
 Polycrystalline materials are made up of an aggregate of many small single
crystals (also called crystallites or grains).
 Polycrystalline materials have a high degree of order over many atomic or
molecular dimensions.
 Grains (domains) are separated by grain boundaries. The atomic order can vary
from one domain to the next.
 The grains are usually 100 nm - 100 microns in diameter.
 Polycrystals with grains less than 10 nm in diameter are nanocrystalline

Polycrystalline
Pyrite form
(Grain)
10
AMORPHOUS SOLIDS
 Amorphous (Non-crystalline) Solids are made up of randomly
orientated atoms , ions, or molecules that do not form defined
patterns or lattice structures.
 Amorphous materials have order only within a few atomic or
molecular dimensions.
 Amorphous materials do not have any long-range order, but they
have varying degrees of short-range order.
 Examples to amorphous materials include amorphous silicon,
plastics, and glasses.
 Amorphous silicon can be used in solar cells and thin film transistors.

11
CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
Crystallography is a branch of science that deals with the geometric
description of crystals and their internal atomic arrangement.
It’s important the symmetry of a crystal because it has a profound influence
on its properties.
Structures should be classified into different types according to the
symmetries they possess.
Energy bands can be calculated when the structure has been determined.

12
CRYSTAL LATTICE
What is a crystal lattice?
In crystallography, only the geometrical properties of the
crystal are of interest, therefore one replaces each atom by
a geometrical point located at the equilibrium position of
that atom.

Platinum Platinum surface Crystal lattice and


(scanning tunneling microscope) structure of Platinum
13
Crystal Lattice
y
 An infinite array of
points in space, B C D E
b α
 Each point has O x
a A
identical surroundings
to all others.

 Arrays are arranged in


a periodic manner.

14
Crystal Structure
 Crystal structures can be obtained by attaching atoms,
groups of atoms or molecules which are called basis
(motif) to the lattice sides of the lattice point.
Crystal Structure = Crystal Lattice + Basis

15
A two-dimensional Bravais lattice
with different choices for the basis
Five Bravais Lattices in 2D

17
Unit Cell in 2D
 The smallest component of the crystal (group of atoms,
ions or molecules), which when stacked together with
pure translational repetition reproduces the whole
crystal.

S S

S S S
b S S S S S
a
S S S S S

18
Unit Cell in 3D

Crystal Structure 19
Three common Unit Cells in 3D

20
Unit Cell

 The unit cell and, consequently,


the entire lattice, is uniquely
determined by the six lattice
constants: a, b, c, α, β and γ.
 Only 1/8 of each lattice point in a
unit cell can actually be assigned
to that cell.
 Each unit cell in the figure can be
associated with 8 x 1/8 = 1 lattice
point.

21
TYPICAL CRYSTAL
STRUCTURES
3D – 14 BRAVAIS LATTICES AND SEVEN CRYSTAL TYPES

 Cubic Crystal System (SC, BCC,FCC)


 Hexagonal Crystal System (S)
 Triclinic Crystal System (S)
 Monoclinic Crystal System (S, Base-C)
 Orthorhombic Crystal System (S, Base-C, BC, FC)
 Tetragonal Crystal System (S, BC)
 Trigonal (Rhombohedral) Crystal System (S)

22
Crystal Structure 23
Sodium Chloride Structure

 Sodium chloride also


crystallizes in a cubic lattice,
but with a different unit cell.
 Sodium chloride structure
consists of equal numbers of
sodium and chlorine ions
placed at alternate points of a
simple cubic lattice.
 Each ion has six of the other
kind of ions as its nearest
neighbours.

24
PART 2
INTERATOMIC FORCES
What kind of forces hold the atoms together in a solid?
 Energies of Interactions Between Atoms
 Ionic bonding
 NaCl
 Covalent bonding
 Comparison of ionic and covalent bonding
 Metallic bonding
 Van der waals bonding
 Hydrogen bonding
Energies of Interactions Between Atoms
 The energy of the crystal is lower than that of
the free atoms by an amount equal to the
energy required to pull the crystal apart into a
set of free atoms. This is called the binding
(cohesive) energy of the crystal.

 NaCl is more stable than a collection of free Na


and Cl.
 Ge crystal is more stable than a collection of free
Ge.

Cl Na NaCl
Types of Bonding Mechanisms
It is conventional to classify the bonds between
atoms into different types as

 Ionic
 Covalent
 Metallic
 Van der Waals
 Hydrogen

All bonding is a consequence of the electrostatic


interaction between the nuclei and electrons.
IONIC BONDING

 Ionic bonding is the electrostatic force of


attraction between positively and negatively
charged ions (between non-metals and metals).

 All ionic compounds are crystalline solids at room


temperature.

 NaCl is a typical example of ionic bonding.


Metallic elements have only up to the valence electrons
in their outer shell.

When losing their electrons they become positive ions.

Electronegative elements tend to acquire additional


electrons to become negative ions or anions.

Na Cl
 When the Na+ and Cl- ions approach each other
closely enough so that the orbits of the electron
in the ions begin to overlap with each other,
then the electron begins to repel each other by
virtue of the repulsive electrostatic coulomb
force. Of course the closer together the ions
are, the greater the repulsive force.

 Pauli exclusion principle has an important role


in repulsive force. To prevent a violation of the
exclusion principle, the potential energy of the
system increases very rapidly.
COVALENT BONDING
 Covalent bonding takes place between atoms with
small differences in electronegativity which are close
to each other in the periodic table (between non-
metals and non-metals).

 The covalent bonding is formed when the atoms share


the outer shell electrons (i.e., s and p electrons) rather
than by electron transfer.

 Noble gas electron configuration can be attained.


 Each electron in a shared pair is attracted to both
nuclei involved in the bond. The approach,
electron overlap, and attraction can be visualized
as shown in the following figure representing the
nuclei and electrons in a hydrogen molecule.

e
Comparison of Ionic and
Covalent Bonding
METALLIC BONDING
 Metallic bonding is found in
metal elements. This is the
electrostatic force of attraction
between positively charged
ions and delocalized outer
electrons.
+ + +
 The metallic bond is weaker
than the ionic and the covalent
bonds.
+ + +
 A metal may be described as a
low-density cloud of free
electrons. + + +

 Therefore, metals have high


electrical and thermal
conductivity.
VAN DER WAALS BONDING
 These are weak bonds with a typical strength of
0.2 eV/atom.

 Van Der Waals bonds occur between neutral atoms


and molecules.

 Weak forces of attraction result from the natural


fluctuations in the electron density of all molecules
that cause small temporary dipoles to appear
within the molecules.

 It is these temporary dipoles that attract one


molecule to another. They are called van der
Waals' forces.
 The shape of a molecule influences its ability to form
temporary dipoles. Long thin molecules can pack
closer to each other than molecules that are more
spherical. The bigger the 'surface area' of a molecule,
the greater the van der Waal's forces will be and the
higher the melting and boiling points of the
compound will be.
 Van der Waal's forces are of the order of 1% of the
strength of a covalent bond.

Homonuclear molecules,
such as iodine, develop Heteronuclear molecules,
temporary dipoles due to such as H-Cl have permanent
natural fluctuations of electron dipoles that attract the opposite
density within the molecule pole in other molecules.
 These forces are due to the electrostatic
attraction between the nucleus of one atom and
the electrons of the other.

 Van der waals interaction occurs generally between


atoms which have noble gas configuration.

van der waals


bonding
HYDROGEN BONDING
 A hydrogen atom, having one electron, can be
covalently bonded to only one atom. However, the
hydrogen atom can involve itself in an additional
electrostatic bond with a second atom of highly
electronegative character such as fluorine or oxygen.
This second bond permits a hydrogen bond between
two atoms or strucures.
 The strength of hydrogen bonding varies from 0.1 to 0.5
ev/atom.
 Hydrogen bonds connect water
molecules in ordinary ice.
Hydrogen bonding is also very
important in proteins and
nucleic acids and therefore in
life processes.
PART 3
CRYSTAL DYNAMICS
 SOUND WAVES
 LATTICE VIBRATIONS OF 1D CRYSTALS
 chain of identical atoms
 chain of two types of atoms
 LATTICE VIBRATIONS OF 3D CRYSTALS
 PHONONS
 HEAT CAPACITY FROM LATTICE VIBRATIONS
 ANHARMONIC EFFECTS
 THERMAL CONDUCTION BY PHONONS
Crystal Dynamics

 Atomic motions are governed by the forces exerted on


atoms when they are displaced from their equilibrium
positions.

 To calculate the forces it is necessary to determine the


wavefunctions and energies of the electrons within the
crystal. Fortunately many important properties of the
atomic motions can be deduced without doing these
calculations.
Hooke's Law
 One of the properties of elasticity is that it takes about twice as
much force to stretch a spring twice as far. This linear dependence
of displacement upon stretching is called Hooke's law.

It takes twice

Fspring  k .x
as much force
to stretch a
spring twice

Spring constant k
F as far.

2F 
SOUND WAVES

• Mechanical waves
It corresponds are
to the waves
atomic which propagate
vibrations λ.
with a longthrough a
material medium (solid, liquid, or gas) at a wave speed
which depends on the elastic and inertial properties of that
• medium.
PresenceThere
of atoms
are has
two no significance
basic types ofinwave
this wavelength
motion for
limit, since λ>>a, so there will no scattering
mechanical waves: longitudinal waves and transverse due to the
presence of atoms.
waves.

Longitudinal Waves

Transverse Waves
SOUND WAVES
 Sound waves propagate through solids. This tells us that
wavelike lattice vibrations of wavelength long compared to the
interatomic spacing are possible. The detailed atomic structure
is unimportant for these waves and their propagation is
governed by the macroscopic elastic properties of the crystal.

 We discuss sound waves since they must correspond to the


low frequency, long wavelength limit of the more general lattice
vibrations considered later in this chapter.

 At a given frequency and in a given direction in a crystal it is


possible to transmit three sound waves, differing in their
direction of polarization and in general also in their velocity.
Speed of Sound Wave
 The speed with which a longitudinal wave moves through a
liquid of density ρ is

C C = Elastic bulk modulus


VL    ρ = Mass density

• The velocity of sound is in general a function of the direction


of propagation in crystalline materials.
• Solids will sustain the propagation of transverse waves, which
travel more slowly than longitudinal waves.
• The larger the elastic modules and smaller the density, the
more rapidly can sound waves travel.
Sound Wave Speed

Speed of sound for some typical solids


Nearest Elastic bulk Calculate Observed
Density
Structure Neighbour modules d Wave speed of
Solid ρ Speed sound
Type Distance Y
(A°) (kg/m3) (m/s) (m/s)
(1010 N/m2)
Sodium B.C.C 3.71 970 0.52 2320 2250
Copper F.C.C 2.55 8966 13.4 3880 3830
Aluminum F.C.C 2.86 2700 7.35 5200 5110
Lead F.C.C 3.49 11340 4.34 1960 1320
Silicon Diamond 2.35 2330 10.1 6600 9150
Germanium Diamond 2.44 5360 7.9 3830 5400
NaCl Rocksalt 2.82 2170 2.5 3400 4730
•VL values are comparable with direct observations of speed of sound.
•Sound speeds are of the order of 5000 m/s in typical metallic, covalent
and ionic solids.
Sound Wave Speed

 A lattice vibrational wave in a crystal is a repetitive and


systematic sequence of atomic displacements of
 longitudinal,
 transverse, or
 some combination of the two

• An equation of motion for any displacement can be


• produced
They can be by characterized by
means of considering the restoring forces
on–A propagation
displaced velocity, v
atoms.
• As– Wavelength
a result weλ can
or wavevector
generate a dispersion relationship
between
– A frequency  or angular
frequency and wavelength
frequencyorω=2π
between angular
frequency and wavevector.
Monoatomic Chain
 The simplest crystal is the one dimensional chain of identical atoms.
 Chain consists of a very large number of identical atoms with identical
masses.
 Atoms are separated by a distance of “a”.
 Atoms move only in a direction parallel to the chain.
 Only nearest neighbours interact (short-range forces).

a a a a a a

Un-2 Un-1 Un Un+1 Un+2


Chain of two types of atom
 Two different types of atoms of masses M and m are
connected by identical springs of spring constant K;
(n-2) (n-1) (n) (n+1) (n+2)
K K K K
M m M m M a)

b)

Un-2 Un-1 Un Un+1 Un+2

• This is the simplest possible model of an ionic crystal.


• Since a is the repeat distance, the nearest neighbors
separations is a/2
Chain of two types of atom

 ω (angular frequency) versus k (wavevector) relation for


diatomic chains
w
A
B
C

–л/a 0 л/a 2л/a k

•• Normal modecontains
If the crystal frequencies of acells
N unit chainweofwould
two types of atoms.
expect to find
At A, the two atoms are oscillating in antiphase with their centre of
2N normal modes of vibrations and this is the total number of
mass at rest;
atoms and
at B, the hence
lighter the total
mass number of and
m is oscillating equations
M is atof motion for
rest;
mass
at C, MMisand m.
oscillating and m is at rest.
Chain of two types of atom

 As there are two values of ω for each value of k, the


dispersion relation is said to have two branches;

w Optical Branch
A
B Upper branch is due to the
C +ve sign of the root.

Acoustical Branch
Lower branch is due to the
k -ve sign of the root.
–л/a 0 л/a 2л/a

• The dispersion relation is periodic in k with a period


2 π /a = 2 π /(unit cell length).
• This result remains valid for a chain containing an
arbitrary number of atoms per unit cell.
Acoustic/Optical Branches
 The acoustic branch has this name because it gives rise to
long wavelength vibrations - speed of sound.

 The optical branch is a higher energy vibration (the frequency


is higher, and you need a certain amount of energy to excite
this mode). The term “optical” comes from how these were
discovered - notice that if atom 1 is +ve and atom 2 is -ve, that
the charges are moving in opposite directions. You can excite
these modes with electromagnetic radiation (ie. The oscillating
electric fields generated by EM radiation)
Transverse optical mode for
diatomic chain

Amplitude of vibration is strongly exaggerated!


Transverse acoustical mode for
diatomic chain
Phonons
 Consider the regular lattice of atoms in a uniform solid
material.
 There should be energy associated with the vibrations of these
atoms.
 But they are tied together with bonds, so they can't vibrate
independently.
 The vibrations take the form of collective modes which
propagate through the material.
 Such propagating lattice vibrations can be considered to be
sound waves.
 And their propagation speed is the speed of sound in the
material.
Phonons

 The vibrational energies of molecules are quantized and


treated as quantum harmonic oscillators.

 Quantum harmonic oscillators have equally spaced


energy levels with separation ΔE = h.

 So the oscillators can accept or lose energy only in


discrete units of energy h.

 The evidence on the behaviour of vibrational energy in


periodic solids is that the collective vibrational modes can
accept energy only in discrete amounts, and these
quanta of energy have been labelled "phonons".
PHONONS PHOTONS
• Quanta of lattice vibrations • Quanta of electromagnetic
• Energies of phonons are radiation
quantized • Energies of photons are
quantized as well

h s hc
E phonon  E photon 
 
~a0 =10-10m
~10-6m

h
p phonon  p photon 
h
 
Thermal energy and lattice vibrations
•Atoms vibrate about their equilibrium position.
•They produce vibrational waves.
•This motion increases as the temperature is raised.

In solids, the energy associated with this vibration and perhaps also with
the rotation of atoms and molecules is called thermal energy.

Note: In a gas, the translational motion of atoms and molecules


contribute to this energy.
Therefore, the concept of thermal energy is fundamental to the
understanding many of the basic properties of solids. We would like to
know:
•What is the value of this thermal energy?
•How much is available to scatter a conduction electron in a metal;
since this scattering gives rise to electrical resistance.
•The energy can be used to activate a crystallographic or a magnetic
transition.
•How the vibrational energy changes with temperature since this gives
a measure of the heat energy which is necessary to raise the
temperature of the material.
•Recall that the specific heat or heat capacity is the thermal energy
which is required to raise the temperature of unit mass or 1g mole by
one Kelvin.
Heat capacity from Lattice vibrations
Energy given to lattice vibrations is the dominant contribution to the
heat capacity in most solids. In non-magnetic insulators, it is the only
contribution.
Other contributions:
•In metals from the conduction electrons.
•In magnetic materials from magneting ordering.
Atomic vibrations lead to bands of normal mode frequencies from zero
up to some maximum value. Calculation of the lattice energy and heat
capacity of a solid therefore falls into two parts:
i) the evaluation of the contribution of a single mode, and
ii) the summation over the frequency distribution of the modes.
Plot of Cv as a function of T
Specific heat at constant volume depends on temperature as shown in
figure below. At high temperatures the value of Cv is close to 3R,
where R is the universal gas constant. Since R is approximately 2
cal/K-mole, at high temperatures Cv is app. 6 cal/K-mole.

This range usually includes RT.


Cv From the figure it is seen that Cv is
equal to 3R at high temperatures
3R regardless of the substance. This fact
is known as Dulong-Petit law. This law
states that specific heat of a given
number of atoms of any solid is
T, K independent of temperature and is the
same for all materials!
Additional Reading
Density of States
According to Quantum Mechanics if a particle is constrained;
 the energy of particle can only have special discrete energy
values.
 it cannot increase infinitely from one value to another.
 it has to go up in steps.
 These steps can be so small depending on the system that the
energy can be considered as continuous.
 This is the case of classical mechanics.
 But on atomic scale the energy can only jump by a discrete
amount from one value to another.

Definite energy levels Steps get small Energy is continuous


 In some cases, each particular energy level can be
associated with more than one different state (or
wavefunction )
 This energy level is said to be degenerate.

 The density of states  ( ) is the number of discrete states


per unit energy interval, and so that the number of states
between  and   d will be  ( )d  .
Anharmonic Effects
 Any real crystal resists compression to a smaller volume than its
equilibrium value more strongly than expansion due to a larger volume.
 This is due to the shape of the interatomic potential curve.
 This is a departure from Hooke’s law, since harmonic application does not
produce this property.
 This is an anharmonic effect due to the higher order terms in potential
which are ignored in harmonic approximation.
 Thermal expansion is an example to the anharmonic effect.
 In harmonic approximation phonons do not interact with each other, in the
absence of boundaries, lattice defects and impurities (which also scatter the
phonons), the thermal conductivity is infinite.
 In anharmonic effect phonons collide with each other and these collisions
limit thermal conductivity which is due to the flow of phonons.
Phonon-phonon collisions
The coupling of normal modes by the unharmonic terms in the
interatomic forces can be pictured as collisions between the phonons
associated with the modes. A typical collision process of

phonon1 w3 , k3
w1 , k1
After collision another phonon is
produced

w2 , k2
phonon2 w3  w1  w
and
2 k3  k1  k2
w3  w1  w2 conservation of energy

k3  k1  k2 conservation of momentum
Thermal conduction by phonons
 A flow of heat takes place from a hotter region to a cooler region
when there is a temperature gradient in a solid.
 The most important contribution to thermal conduction comes from
the flow of phonons in an electrically insulating solid.
 Transport property is an example of thermal conduction.
 Transport property is the process in which the flow of some quantity
occurs.
 Thermal conductivity is a transport coefficient and it describes the
flow.
 The thermal conductivity of a phonon gas in a solid will be
calculated by means of the elementary kinetic theory of the transport
coefficients of gases.

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