SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICE PHYSICS AND DESIGN

(Greg DeLong) #1
524 APPENDIX B. BOLTZMANN TRANSPORT THEORY

Elastic Collisions
Elastic collisions represent scattering events in which the energy of the electrons remains un-
changed after the collision. Impurity scattering and alloy scattering discussed in Chapter 8 fall
into this category. In the case of elastic scattering the principle of microscopic reversibility
ensures that
W(k,k



)=W(k


,k) (B.25)

i.e., the scattering rate from an initial statekto a final statek



is the same as that for the reverse
process. The collision integral is now simplified as


∂f
∂t

)

scattering

=

∫ [

f(k


)−f(k)

]

W(k,k


)

d^3 k


(2π)^3

=

∫ [

g(k


)−g(k)

]

W(k,k


)

d^3 k


(2π)^3

(B.26)

The simple form of the Boltzmann equation is (from equation B.17)


−∂f^0
∂Ek

vk·eE =


(gk−gk′)W(k,k


)d^3 k


=

−∂f
∂t

)

scattering

(B.27)

The relaxation time was defined through


gk =

(

−∂f^0
∂E

)

eE·vk·τ

=

−∂f
∂t

)

scattering

·τ (B.28)

Substituting this value in the integral on the right-hand side, we get

−∂f^0
∂Ek

vk·eE=

−∂f^0
∂Ek

eτE·


(vk−vk′)W(k,k


)d^3 k


(B.29)

or


vk·E=τ


(vk−vk′)W(k,k


)d^3 k


·E (B.30)

and
1
τ


=


W(k,k


)

[

1 −

vk′·E
vk·E

]

d^3 k


(B.31)

In general, this is a rather complex integral to solve. However, it becomes considerably sim-
plified for certain simple cases. Consider, for example, the case of isotropic parabolic bands and
elastic scattering. In figure B.4 we show a geometry for the scattering process. We choose a
coordinate axis where the initial momentum is along thez-axis and the applied electric field is

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