2.1. The Effective Density of RM Electrons in Crystalline Metals and Related Characteristics
The total density
n of the electrons in the conduction band is described by DOS
g(
E) in the unit volume as:
where the Fermi distribution function is:
here
η is the chemical potential, and
(here
EF is the Fermi level energy) because the difference between these quantities is only about 0.01% at room temperature;
k is the Boltzmann′s constant; and
T is the absolute temperature.
The density of the free randomly moving (RM) electrons depends not only on the DOS g(E) of the electrons in the conduction band and Fermi distribution function f(E), but it also depends on the probability 1 − f(E) that at a given temperature T the electron can be thermally scattered or change its energy under the influence of the external field.
Therefore, the effective density of the RM electrons
is defined as [
13,
14]:
This Equation is valid for homogeneous materials both with degenerate and non-degenerate electron gas. From this Equation, it also follows that the term:
is the probability density function of energy
E of free RM electrons. The function
meets all requirements of the probability theory and is in agreement with the Pauli exclusion principle. The probability density function
is presented in
Figure 1. The area restricted by the dashed line is equal to 1, and the effective width of the
in energy is
. Thus, the effective density of RM electrons is stochastic quantity, while the total density of valence electrons in the conduction band is a constant quantity.
The average value of any random function
x(
E), depending on the energy
E of the RM electrons, can be completely determined as:
For materials (semiconductors) with non-degenerate electron gas, the probability because , and all electrons in the conduction band take part in random motion, and their density is described as (1). It is the case when the classical statistics are valid. In the case of highly degenerate electron gas, the relation (3) can be presented in the following form:
where
at
. There it can be pointed out that
at a given temperature
T is only determined by the DOS value at the Fermi surface, and it does not depend on the DOS distribution form in the conduction band, and on the form of Fermi surface, i.e., this relation is also valid for elemental transition metals. The
values can be obtained from the experimental data of the electronic heat capacity measurements [
15,
16]:
The electronic heat capacity parameter
γ for all elemental metals is determined and tabulated [
15,
16]. If we use the Sommerfeld′s model based on the spherical Fermi surface we will get the DOS values
with very large uncertainty for metals with composite Fermi surfaces [
13,
14]. The relation between the density of the RM electrons and the total density of the valence electrons is shown in
Figure 2a.
In agreement with quantum mechanics, the electrons in the ideal periodicity crystal are arranged in energy bands according to the Bloch waves. Each primitive cell exactly contributes only one independent value of the wave vector to each energy band [
2,
15,
17]. In the three-dimensional case, there are 2
N independent orbitals in each energy band, where
N is the number of primitive cells in the sample with the volume
V. It can be here pointed out that the obtained result does not depend on both atom or electron masses. If an electron energy belongs to the conduction band, it does not automatically (by itself) mean that it can randomly move or can be scattered by thermal lattice vibrations. A schematic illustration of Equations (1)–(4) and DOS
g(
E) functions for the parabolic energy band (for metals with spherical Fermi surface) is shown in
Figure 2b.
The dark gray area represents the effective density of RM electrons
neff (estimated by Equation (3)); these RM electrons can be scattered and produce the Brownian motion and change their energy, but the other part of the electrons (
n−
neff) cannot be scattered and change their energy. The probability density function that these electrons can be scattered is equal to zero. Moreover, these electrons are not affected by lattice thermal vibrations, because the variance of the thermal energy for these electrons is
. Therefore, that part of the electrons is localized and bonded to their native ions. The solid line in
Figure 2a has been calculated by using well-known Sommerfeld formula
with
m equal to the free electron mass. To get the agreement of Sommerfeld formula with experimental data, it is used a particular effective mass of the DOS of elemental metals [
1,
8,
11], but the DOS in the energy band is caused only by the number of primitive cells in the sample [
2,
15,
17].
The average energy of the valence electron in the metal is smaller than in the isolated atom. This decrease in the energy of the valence electrons in metals causes the binding energy of atoms in crystalline elemental metals [
1,
18]. The valence electron wave functions overlap substantially with that of the neighbor atoms [
2,
11,
15], but they remain associated with the native atoms: The valence electron charge cloud density is concentrated near the parent ions. Only the valence electrons with energies that are close to the Fermi level energy due to lattice ion vibrations can be released, produce the Brownian motion in the metal crystal, and can leave the native atoms; they become free and can randomly move in the crystalline metal. Thus, the free electron term can be used only for free RM electrons, the other part (
n−
neff) of the valence electrons is localized near the native ions. Here we want to point out that part of the electrons (
n−
neff) is not free yet for alkali metals though their Fermi surfaces are almost spherical.
2.2. Diffusion Coefficient and Drift Mobility of RM Electrons
The electrical conductivity
σ and the free electron diffusion coefficient
D are related by the following general expression [
19,
20]:
After a simple calculation of the derivative
n on the chemical potential
η, the following expression is obtained:
where
is described by (3). Equation (9) shows that the conductivity in all cases is determined by the effective density of RM electrons. The same expression is also obtained from the Boltzmann kinetic Equation [
4,
21] and from the description of the electric thermal noise [
13].
On the other hand, the conductivity can be described as:
where
is the drift mobility of the RM electrons. From relations (9) and (10) it follows the Einstein′s relation between the diffusion coefficient and the drift mobility of the free RM electrons:
Equations (9)–(11) are valid for all homogeneous materials with a single type of charge carrier at any degeneracy degree. The relationships between the conductivity, diffusion coefficient, and drift mobility of the RM electrons for elemental metals at 295 K are presented in
Figure 3a. From this figure it follows that the drift mobility for most of the elemental metals is many times larger than the Hall mobility [
22,
23].
For elemental metals, the conductivity (9) can be described as
where
and
are, respectively, the velocity and relaxation time of the RM electrons at the Fermi surface.
2.3. The Scattering of the RM Electrons and Their Mean Free Path
From Equation (12) it follows that the diffusion coefficient is related to at least five transport parameters of the RM electrons:
where
is the mean free path of the RM electrons.
The most important parameter characterizing the scattering mechanism of the RM electrons is their mean free path. According to the quantum mechanics, the free electrons can freely move in the ideal periodic lattice of the metal crystal without any scattering by ions [
1,
5,
15,
17,
21]. Therefore, the scattering of free electrons can be only in spots where there are distortions of the periodicity of the potential energy of the ideal lattice structure. The resistivity of metals is caused due to the scattering of free electrons by impurities, vacancies, interstitial atoms, dislocations, boundaries of grains, and the surface. The electron mean free path due to the named defects almost does not depend on temperature, and their dominance appears at low temperatures. In the temperature range above the Debye′s temperature, the mean free path changes as 1/
T, while below the Debye′s temperature it usually changes as
T−5. Considering that the effective density of the free RM electrons increases with temperature [
], another explanation mechanism is needed to explain the electron scattering cross-section by lattice vibrations.
Now, let us return to the Fermi distribution function. The average effective density of the RM electrons in elemental metals is
, which are produced by thermal vibrations of some of the atoms, i.e., by atoms which have valence electrons with energy near to Fermi level energy. It means that on average there is an effective density of atoms
, which can generate free RM electrons, and it may be expressed as
These
atoms generate free RM electrons, which lose the parent atoms to large distances of order of the electron mean free path and also produce both not completely screened positive ions and local distortions in the periodical distribution of the charge density. Considering that these defects do not produce any distortion in the lattice structure, such defects are named as electronic defects [
22,
23].
The other part ( of atoms that have valence electrons with energy well below the Fermi level energy does not have sufficient thermal vibration energy to excite RM electrons near to Fermi level energy (here is the density of metal atoms). In other words, the part (n−neff) of the valence electrons which energy is lower than EF by at least several units of kT, due to Pauli exclusion principle and Fermi-Dirac statistics, is not affected by lattice vibrations, because all neighbor energy levels are occupied. It is the most important property of such electrons. Moreover, this part of electrons has no influence on the motion of the free RM electrons. Thus, the Pauli exclusion principle drastically reduces the number of processes by which valence electrons can interact and be scattered by ions and other electrons. The vibrations of the ( atoms can be interpreted as neutral atom vibrations: the part (n−neff) of valence electrons is sufficiently tightly bonded to their parent ions, and they move together with ions because they cannot change their energy. Usually, the movement of electrons without the energy changing corresponds to their stationary motion.
Therefore, with a temperature increase, the thermal vibrations of the lattice ions stimulate the increase of the RM electron density , and at the same time produce the same density of the local distortion spots (electronic defects) of the potential (or charge density) periodicity.
Then the electron mean free path
of the RM electrons in metals can be described as:
where
and
are, respectively, the electron velocity and their relaxation time at the Fermi surface; and
is the effective scattering cross-section of the RM electrons by electronic defects. On the other hand, the average relaxation time can be described as:
From Equations (15) and (16) it follows that the effective scattering cross-section of the RM electrons at temperatures over Debye′s temperature does not depend on temperature.
As it is shown in [
23], the effective scattering cross-section of electrons
by electronic defects depends on the ratio of the exchange of the thermal energies between the electronic defect and RM electron:
where
can be evaluated from (15) at room temperature;
Θ is the Debye′s temperature; and
is the phonon mediation factor accounting for the RM electrons scattering by electronic defects [
23]:
The effective scattering cross-section of electrons
distribution on the DOS at the Fermi surface at
T0 = 295 K evaluated by (15), and by using the electron mean free path data from [
23] for elemental metals, is shown in
Figure 3b. It is seen that the obtained cross-section values
on average correspond to atom cross-section values.
The resultant average relaxation time
in a wide temperature range can be described as:
where
, and
is the electron relaxation time due to their scattering at low temperature by various impurities and structure defects of the lattice;
is the electron scattering cross-section by impurities; and
is the impurity density.
Then the resistivity of the elemental metal in the overall temperature range can be described as:
where
is the residual resistivity due to electron scattering by imperfections of the lattice defects, and
is the resistivity at
T = 295 K.
An illustration of the applicability of the relation (20) for the estimation of the resistivity is presented in
Figure 4a for Sr, Au, Cu, Mo, and Al, and in
Figure 4b for Pd, V, Ag, Zn, and W in temperature range from 1 to 1000 K.