Lattice Dynamics - 1: Book References: Solid State Physics by A. J. Dekker Solid State Physics by D. S. Blakemore
Lattice Dynamics - 1: Book References: Solid State Physics by A. J. Dekker Solid State Physics by D. S. Blakemore
Lattice Dynamics - 1: Book References: Solid State Physics by A. J. Dekker Solid State Physics by D. S. Blakemore
Book References:
Solid state Physics by A. J. Dekker
Solid State Physics by D. S. Blakemore
So far whatever we studied in the previous chapter:
We considered the lattice to be static, i.e., atoms are static in their
positions at any temperature.
In actual case all atoms vibrate at any temperature from their
equilibrium position.
We start with the derivation of mode vibration in terms of dispersion
relation; We’ll discuss the simplest one first which is a linear monatomic
lattice, where you will have one type of atoms of mass ‘m’ spaced at,
say ‘a’ distance.
Dispersion relation in linear monatomic lattice
un, un+1 and un-1 are displacements of nth,
(n+1)th and (n-1)th atoms from their
equilibrium positions respectively
We make some basic assumptions:
• The chain is infinite (we’ll discuss about finite chain later on)
• The atoms are held to each other by some massless spring (you may
consider it as the interatomic bonding. When atoms vibrate, spring provides
the restoring force to bring the atom back to its equilibrium position.
• The force of vibration is in elastic limit, i.e., Hooke’s law is satisfied (This
is quite justified as the displacement is much less than the interatomic
separation ‘a’, i.e., atoms can not break the interatomic bonding by the
vibration).
• Vibration effect is to nearest neighbour only (there may be little effect
however).
• Harmonic approximation-at any temperature equilibrium position is not
disturbed (actually not true though-anharmonicty is mostly present).
The Derivation
We assumed that Hooke’s law is obeyed. With this and the assumption of
nearest neighbour approximation, force on nth atom can be written as
𝑚ω2ϋn = -α (un –un+1) - α (un –un-1), where ω is the frequency of lattice
vibration wave and α is the Hooke’s constant or force constant.
With plane wave approximation, un can be written as
un = A exp (ikx – ωt), where A is the amplitude of vibration and k is the
un = A exp (ikna – ωt), wave vector and x = na.
un+1 = A exp [ik(n+1)a – ωt] and un-1 = A exp [ik(n-1)a – ωt]
Then ύn = -iω un and ϋn = - ω2 un
We can write
- 𝑚ω2 un = α (un+1 + un+1 - 2un)
𝑚ω2 = α (2 − un+1/un − un+1/un)
= α (2 - eikna - e-ikna)
= α (2 – 2coska)
= 2α (1 – coska)
= 4αsin2ka/2
or, ω2 = (4α/m)sin2ka/2
or, ω = ± (4α/m)1/2sinka/2 = ± ω0 sinka/2, where ω0 = (4α/m)1/2
This is the dispersion relation (ω vs k relation) for linear monatomic
lattice, which is a sine function.
ω vs k plot