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Band Theory and Electronic Properties of Solids, PDF eBook

Band Theory and Electronic Properties of Solids PDF

Part of the Oxford Master Series in Condensed Matter Physics series

PDF

Please note: eBooks can only be purchased with a UK issued credit card and all our eBooks (ePub and PDF) are DRM protected.

Description

This book provides an introduction to band theory and the electronic properties of materials at a level suitable for final-year undergraduates or first-year graduate students.

It sets out to provide the vocabulary and quantum-mechanical training necessary to understand the electronic, optical and structural properties of the materials met in science and technology and describes some of the experimental techniques which are used to study band structure today.

In orderto leave space for recent developments, the Drude model and the introduction of quantum statistics are treated synoptically.

However, Bloch's theorem and two tractable limits, a very weak periodic potential and the tight-binding model, are developed rigorously and in three dimensions.

Havingintroduced the ideas of bands, effective masses and holes, semiconductor and metals are treated in some detail, along with the newer ideas of artificial structures such as super-lattices and quantum wells, layered organic substances and oxides.

Some recent `hot topics' in research are covered, e.g. the fractional Quantum Hall Effect and nano-devices, which can be understood using the techniques developed in the book.

In illustrating examples of e.g. the de Haas-van Alphen effect, the bookfocuses on recent experimental data, showing that the field is a vibrant and exciting one.

References to many recent review articles are provided, so that the student can conduct research into a chosen topic at a deeper level.

Several appendices treating topics such as phonons and crystal structure makethe book self-contained introduction to the fundamentals of band theory and electronic properties in condensed matter physic today.

Also in the Oxford Master Series in Condensed Matter Physics series