
$$\hbar\omega_ph > |E_\mathbfk - E_F|$$
$$\frac1\tau(\mathbfk) = \frac2\pi\hbar \sum_\mathbfk', \lambda |M_\lambda(\mathbfq)|^2 \left[ n_\mathbfq\lambda \delta(E_\mathbfk' - E_\mathbfk + \hbar\omega_\mathbfq\lambda) + (n_\mathbfq\lambda+1) \delta(E_\mathbfk' - E_\mathbfk - \hbar\omega_\mathbfq\lambda) \right]$$
This leads to a in the phonon dispersion curve $\omega(\mathbfq)$ at $\mathbfq = 2\mathbfk_F$. Experimentally observing Kohn anomalies (via neutron scattering) provides a direct measurement of the Fermi surface geometry—a powerful tool confirmed in metals like lead and niobium. 5. The Seed of Superconductivity (BCS Theory) No discussion of Chapter 13 is complete without its crowning achievement. While the chapter may stop short of full BCS theory, it lays the essential groundwork.
The title of this chapter, across various editions and syllabi, is almost universally This is the engine of resistivity, the origin of superconductivity, and the key to understanding temperature-dependent band gaps. This article dissects the core principles, mathematical machinery, and physical consequences of Chapter 13. 1. The Fundamental Coupling: Why Electrons and Ions Cannot Ignore Each Other Up to Chapter 12, the Born-Oppenheimer approximation treated nuclei as fixed classical potentials. Chapter 13 systematically destroys that approximation. The central idea is simple yet profound: ions are not static; they vibrate. An electron feels a different potential depending on the instantaneous positions of those ions. ziman principles of the theory of solids 13
The perturbation $\delta V$ is the electron-phonon interaction Hamiltonian, $H_e-ph$. For long-wavelength acoustic phonons (sound waves), the lattice is locally dilated or compressed. A change in volume changes the bottom of the conduction band (or top of the valence band). This is captured by the deformation potential constant , $E_1$:
$$V_total(\mathbfr) = V_0(\mathbfr) + \delta V(\mathbfr, t)$$
Introduction: The Bridge Between Lattice and Electron In the pantheon of solid-state physics literature, few texts carry the weight of Principles of the Theory of Solids by J. M. Ziman (or the closely related Solid State Theory by Walter A. Harrison). Chapter 13 stands as a pivotal summit in these works. By this stage, the reader has mastered the independent electron model (Chapter 6) and the physics of lattice vibrations, or phonons (Chapter 12). Chapter 13 is where these two worlds collide. The Seed of Superconductivity (BCS Theory) No discussion
This is the glue of Cooper pairs. Chapter 13 thus provides the microscopic justification for why a lattice—a source of resistance—can paradoxically become the medium for zero-resistance superconductivity below a critical temperature $T_c$. Finally, Chapter 13 extends its reach to ionic semiconductors. In polar crystals (e.g., GaAs, NaCl), an electron moving through the lattice polarizes its surroundings, dragging a cloud of virtual optical phonons with it. The composite entity—electron plus phonon cloud—is called a polaron .
The net effective interaction is attractive for electrons near the Fermi surface with opposite momenta and spins ($\mathbfk, \uparrow$ and $-\mathbfk, \downarrow$) if:
If an ion at position $\mathbfR$ displaces by $\mathbfu(\mathbfR, t)$ due to a phonon, the potential $V(\mathbfr)$ experienced by an electron at position $\mathbfr$ changes. The total potential is: \nabla \cdot \mathbfu(\mathbfr)$$
$$H_e-ph = \sum_\mathbfk, \mathbfk', \lambda M_\lambda(\mathbfq) , c_\mathbfk'^\dagger c_\mathbfk (a_\mathbfq\lambda + a_-\mathbfq\lambda^\dagger)$$
This simple scalar term is the workhorse for understanding scattering of electrons by acoustic phonons in simple metals and semiconductors. To make this quantitative, Chapter 13 introduces the second-quantized form of the interaction. Quantizing both the electron field and the phonon field, the interaction Hamiltonian becomes:
$$\delta E_c(\mathbfr) = E_1 , \nabla \cdot \mathbfu(\mathbfr)$$