Thomas–Fermi screening is a theoretical approach to calculate the effects of
electric field screening by electrons in a solid.
[N. W. Ashcroft and N. D. Mermin, ''Solid State Physics'' (Thomson Learning, Toronto, 1976)] It is a special case of the more general
Lindhard theory; in particular, Thomas–Fermi screening is the limit of the
Lindhard formula when the wavevector (the reciprocal of the length-scale of interest) is much smaller than the Fermi wavevector, i.e. the long-distance limit.
[ It is named after Llewellyn Thomas and ]Enrico Fermi
Enrico Fermi (; 29 September 1901 – 28 November 1954) was an Italian (later naturalized American) physicist and the creator of the world's first nuclear reactor, the Chicago Pile-1. He has been called the "architect of the nuclear age" an ...
.
The Thomas–Fermi wavevector (in Gaussian-cgs units) is[
where ''μ'' is the ]chemical potential
In thermodynamics, the chemical potential of a species is the energy that can be absorbed or released due to a change of the particle number of the given species, e.g. in a chemical reaction or phase transition. The chemical potential of a species ...
(Fermi level
The Fermi level of a solid-state body is the thermodynamic work required to add one electron to the body. It is a thermodynamic quantity usually denoted by ''µ'' or ''E''F
for brevity. The Fermi level does not include the work required to remov ...
), ''n'' is the electron concentration and ''e'' is the elementary charge
The elementary charge, usually denoted by is the electric charge carried by a single proton or, equivalently, the magnitude of the negative electric charge carried by a single electron, which has charge −1 . This elementary charge is a funda ...
.
Under many circumstances, including semiconductors that are not too heavily doped, , where ''k''B is Boltzmann constant and ''T'' is temperature. In this case,
i.e. is given by the familiar formula for Debye length
In plasmas and electrolytes, the Debye length \lambda_ (also called Debye radius), is a measure of a charge carrier's net electrostatic effect in a solution and how far its electrostatic effect persists. With each Debye length the charges are ...
. In the opposite extreme, in the low-temperature limit ,
electrons behave as quantum particles (fermions
In particle physics, a fermion is a particle that follows Fermi–Dirac statistics. Generally, it has a half-odd-integer spin: spin , spin , etc. In addition, these particles obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Fermions include all quarks and le ...
). Such an approximation is valid for metals at room temperature, and the Thomas–Fermi screening wavevector ''k''TF given in atomic units
The Hartree atomic units are a system of natural units of measurement which is especially convenient for atomic physics and computational chemistry calculations. They are named after the physicist Douglas Hartree. By definition, the following fo ...
is
If we restore the electron mass
The electron mass (symbol: ''m''e) is the mass of a stationary electron, also known as the invariant mass of the electron. It is one of the fundamental constants of physics. It has a value of about or about , which has an energy-equivalent of ab ...
and the Planck constant
The Planck constant, or Planck's constant, is a fundamental physical constant of foundational importance in quantum mechanics. The constant gives the relationship between the energy of a photon and its frequency, and by the mass-energy equivalen ...
, the screening wavevector in Gaussian units is .
For more details and discussion, including the one-dimensional and two-dimensional cases, see the article on Lindhard theory.
Derivation
Relation between electron density and internal chemical potential
The internal chemical potential
In thermodynamics, the chemical potential of a species is the energy that can be absorbed or released due to a change of the particle number of the given species, e.g. in a chemical reaction or phase transition. The chemical potential of a species ...
(closely related to Fermi level
The Fermi level of a solid-state body is the thermodynamic work required to add one electron to the body. It is a thermodynamic quantity usually denoted by ''µ'' or ''E''F
for brevity. The Fermi level does not include the work required to remov ...
, see below) of a system of electrons describes how much energy is required to put an extra electron into the system, neglecting electrical potential energy. As the number of electrons in the system increases (with fixed temperature and volume), the internal chemical potential increases. This consequence is largely because electrons satisfy the Pauli exclusion principle
In quantum mechanics, the Pauli exclusion principle states that two or more identical particles with half-integer spins (i.e. fermions) cannot occupy the same quantum state within a quantum system simultaneously. This principle was formulated ...
: only one electron may occupy an energy level and lower-energy electron states are already full, so the new electrons must occupy higher and higher energy states.
Given a Fermi gas of density , the highest occupied momentum state (at zero temperature) is known as the Fermi momentum, .
Then the required relationship is described by the electron number density
The number density (symbol: ''n'' or ''ρ''N) is an intensive quantity used to describe the degree of concentration of countable objects (particles, molecules, phonons, cells, galaxies, etc.) in physical space: three-dimensional volumetric number ...
as a function of ''μ'', the internal chemical potential. The exact functional form depends on the system. For example, for a three-dimensional Fermi gas
An ideal Fermi gas is a state of matter which is an ensemble of many non-interacting fermions. Fermions are particles that obey Fermi–Dirac statistics, like electrons, protons, and neutrons, and, in general, particles with half-integer s ...
, a noninteracting electron gas, at absolute zero temperature, the relation is .
Proof: Including spin degeneracy,
(in this context—i.e., absolute zero—the internal chemical potential is more commonly called the Fermi energy
The Fermi energy is a concept in quantum mechanics usually referring to the energy difference between the highest and lowest occupied single-particle states in a quantum system of non-interacting fermions at absolute zero temperature.
In a Fermi ga ...
).
As another example, for an n-type semiconductor
An extrinsic semiconductor is one that has been '' doped''; during manufacture of the semiconductor crystal a trace element or chemical called a doping agent has been incorporated chemically into the crystal, for the purpose of giving it differe ...
at low to moderate electron concentration, .
Local approximation
The main assumption in the Thomas–Fermi model
The Thomas–Fermi (TF) model,
named after Llewellyn Thomas and Enrico Fermi, is a quantum mechanical theory for the electronic structure of many-body systems developed semiclassically shortly after the introduction of the Schrödinger equat ...
is that there is an internal chemical potential at each point r that depends ''only'' on the electron concentration at the same point r. This behaviour cannot be exactly true because of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle
In quantum mechanics, the uncertainty principle (also known as Heisenberg's uncertainty principle) is any of a variety of mathematical inequalities asserting a fundamental limit to the accuracy with which the values for certain pairs of physi ...
. No electron can exist at a single point; each is spread out into a wavepacket
In physics, a wave packet (or wave train) is a short "burst" or " envelope" of localized wave action that travels as a unit. A wave packet can be analyzed into, or can be synthesized from, an infinite set of component sinusoidal waves of di ...
of size ≈ 1 / ''k''F, where ''k''F is the Fermi wavenumber, i.e. a typical wavenumber for the states at the Fermi surface In condensed matter physics, the Fermi surface is the surface in reciprocal space which separates occupied from unoccupied electron states at zero temperature. The shape of the Fermi surface is derived from the periodicity and symmetry of the crys ...
. Therefore it cannot be possible to define a chemical potential at a single point, independent of the electron density at nearby points.
Nevertheless, the Thomas–Fermi model is likely to be a reasonably accurate approximation as long as the potential does not vary much over lengths comparable or smaller than 1 / ''k''F. This length usually corresponds to a few atoms in metals.
Electrons in equilibrium, nonlinear equation
Finally, the Thomas–Fermi model assumes that the electrons are in equilibrium, meaning that the total chemical potential is the same at all points. (In electrochemistry terminology, "the electrochemical potential
In electrochemistry, the electrochemical potential (ECP), ', is a thermodynamic measure of chemical potential that does not omit the energy contribution of electrostatics. Electrochemical potential is expressed in the unit of J/ mol.
Introduc ...
of electrons is the same at all points". In semiconductor physics terminology, "the Fermi level
The Fermi level of a solid-state body is the thermodynamic work required to add one electron to the body. It is a thermodynamic quantity usually denoted by ''µ'' or ''E''F
for brevity. The Fermi level does not include the work required to remov ...
is flat".) This balance requires that the variations in internal chemical potential are matched by equal and opposite variations in the electric potential energy. This gives rise to the "basic equation of nonlinear Thomas–Fermi theory":