References

  • Cohen and Louie, β€œFundamentals of Condensed Matter Physics”, chapter 10

Rigid-ion Model

The idea is that each ion (or atom) is assumed to contribute rigidly to the total potential seen by electrons in the solid. As an ion is moved away from equilibrium position, the potential is no longer periodic and will scatter an electron from on Bloch state to another.

Let be the static crystal potential,

where

and is the cell index, is the atomic index, and is the vector to atoms in the basis.

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We assume the displacement is much less than atomic spacing

For typical vibrations it can be shown that and the excitation or phonon energy scales as

where is a typical electron energy, is the mass of the electron and is the atomic mass. Because of this, we can assume the large-scale band structure is unmodified. However, the ion vibrations do affect the dynamics of the electrons. For example, in a metal, electron-phonon interactions can cause a β€œwrinkle” in the band structure within a few meV of the Fermi energy.

Assuming a small displacement, at a specific time , we can expand the potential to first order in the displacements

The total Hamiltonian is

The electron-phonon contribution is

Expanding the displacement in phonon coordinates, we have

where

and is the wavevector, labels the atomic species, is the phonon branch index, and is the polarization vector. The phonon destruction and creation operators are and respectively. They are not related to the atomic species. Substituting this into the electron-phonon Hamiltonian, we get

In second quantized formalism, we have

This defines the electron-phonon matrix element . We now suppress the band indices by using an extended zone scheme so that is not limited to the first Brillouin zone. The electron-phonon Hamiltonian. The matrix elements