Cover Page

Philip Hofmann

 

Solid State Physics

An Introduction

 

 

Second Edition

 

 

 

 

Title Page

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Preface of the First Edition

This book emerged from a course on solid state physics for third-year students of physics and nanoscience, but it should also be useful for students of related fields such as chemistry and engineering. The aim is to provide a bachelor-level survey over the whole field without going into too much detail. With this in mind, a lot of emphasis is put on a didactic presentation and little on stringent mathematical derivations or completeness. For a more in-depth treatment, the reader is referred to the many excellent advanced solid state physics books. A few are listed in the Appendix.

To follow this text, a basic university-level physics course is required as well as some working knowledge of chemistry, quantum mechanics, and statistical physics. A course in classical electrodynamics is of advantage but not strictly necessary.

Some remarks on how to use this book: Every chapter is accompanied by a set of “discussion” questions and problems. The intention of the questions is to give the student a tool for testing his/her understanding of the subject. Some of the questions can only be answered with knowledge of later chapters. These are marked by an asterisk. Some of the problems are more of a challenge in that they are more difficult mathematically or conceptually or both. These problems are also marked by an asterisk. Not all the information necessary for solving the problems is given here. For standard data, for example, the density of gold or the atomic weight of copper, the reader is referred to the excellent resources available on the World Wide Web.

Finally, I would like to thank the people who have helped me with many discussions and suggestions. In particular, I would like to mention my colleagues Arne Nylandsted Larsen, Ivan Steensgaard, Maria Fuglsang Jensen, Justin Wells, and many others involved in teaching the course in Aarhus.

Preface of the Second Edition

The second edition of this book is slightly enlarged in some subject areas and significantly improved throughout. The enlargement comprises subjects that turned out to be too essential to be missing, even in a basic introduction such as this one. One example is the tight-binding model for electronic states in solids, which is now added in its simplest form. Other enlargements reflect recent developments in the field that should at least be mentioned in the text and explained on a very basic level, such as graphene and topological insulators.

I decided to support the first edition by online material for subjects that were either crucial for the understanding of this text, but not familiar to all readers, or not central enough to be included in the book but still of interest. This turned out to be a good concept, and the new edition is therefore supported by an extended number of such notes; they are referred to in the text. The notes can be found on my homepage www.philiphofmann.net.

The didactical presentation has been improved, based on the experience of many people with the first edition. The most severe changes have been made in the chapter on magnetism but minor adjustments have been made throughout the book. In these changes, didactic presentation was given a higher priority than elegance or conformity to standard notation, for example, in the figures on Pauli paramagnetism or band ferromagnetism.

Every chapter now contains a “Further Reading” section in the end. Since these sections are supposed to be independent of each other, you will find that the same books are mentioned several times.

I thank the many students and instructors who participated in the last few years' Solid State Physics course at Aarhus University, as well as many colleagues for their criticism and suggestions. Special thanks go to NL architects for permitting me to use the flipper-bridge picture in Figure 11.3, to Justin Wells for suggesting the analogy to the topological insulators, to James Kermode for Figure 3.7, to Arne Nylandsted Larsen and Antonija Grubišić Čabo for advice on the sections on solar cells and magnetism, respectively.

Physical Constants and Energy Equivalents

Planck constant h fbetw-math-0002 J s
fbetw-math-0003 eV s
Boltzmann constant fbetw-math-0004 fbetw-math-0005
fbetw-math-0006
Proton charge e fbetw-math-0007 C
Bohr radius fbetw-math-0008 fbetw-math-0009 m
Bohr magneton fbetw-math-0010 fbetw-math-0011
Avogadro number fbetw-math-0012 fbetw-math-0013 particles/mol
Speed of light c fbetw-math-0014
Rest mass of the electron fbetw-math-0015 fbetw-math-0016 kg
Rest mass of the proton fbetw-math-0017 fbetw-math-0018 kg
Rest mass of the neutron fbetw-math-0019 fbetw-math-0020 kg
Atomic mass unit amu fbetw-math-0021 kg
Permeability of vacuum fbetw-math-0022 fbetw-math-0023 V s fbetw-math-0024
Permittivity of vacuum fbetw-math-0025 fbetw-math-0026

fbetw-math-0027

fbetw-math-0028