Electron-phonon interactions and Kohn anomalies

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Electron-phonon interactions

The study of interactions between electrons and phonons, is an interesting and classical topic in quantum many body theory as well as condensed matter physics. The electron-phonon interaction leads to many novel properties in metals, for instance, electrical resistance, thermal resistance, superconductivity and the renormalization of linear electronic specific heat. [1]

Free electrons in lattice

In contrary to the independent electron model, where electrons experience weak periodic potential, the interaction of an electron with all other electrons and nuclei is represented by ‘effective potential’ in some average way, in the tight-binding approximation, electrons move in strong periodic potentials which cannot be approximated by an average background. In this situation, we can assume that the atoms are very widely separated and atomic orbitals remain undistorted.

As an example, the problem will be revisited in the second quantization language. States and denote the states of electrons locate on atom 1 and 2, respectively. The state of the two-electron system is thus given by , where is the occupation number for each atom. Define creation and annihilation operators and , which obey anti-commutation relations:

Phonons: crystal vibrations

Lattice Vibration and Phonons in 1D


Acoustical and Optical Phonon in 3D

Derivation of Hamiltonian Electron-Phonon Coupling

The Hamiltonian for the electron-phonon interaction can be described as

Where


Feynman diagrams of electron-phonon coupling

Electron-phonon interaction in the lattice model

Jellium model

The Polaron problem

Linear response calculations of electron-phonon interactions

Examples