Below is a step-by-step derivation of Einstein’s specific heat formula for a solid, modeling atoms as harmonic oscillators vibrating at a single frequency, followed by high and low temperature cases.
Step 1: Model Assumptions
Einstein’s model assumes a solid with \( N \) atoms, each acting as a 3D harmonic oscillator, giving \( 3N \) oscillators, all vibrating at frequency \( \omega \). Each oscillator is quantized.
Step 2: Energy of a Single Oscillator
The energy levels of a quantum harmonic oscillator are:
The average thermal energy (excluding zero-point energy) is:
Step 3: Total Internal Energy \( U \)
For \( 3N \) oscillators:
Step 4: Specific Heat \( C_V \)
The specific heat at constant volume is:
Let \( \beta = \frac{\hbar \omega}{k_B T} \). Then:
Differentiate with respect to \( T \), noting \( \frac{\partial \beta}{\partial T} = -\frac{\beta}{T} \):
Define \( \theta_E = \frac{\hbar \omega}{k_B} \), so:
This is the Einstein specific heat formula.
Case 1: High Temperature (\( T \gg \theta_E \))
When \( \frac{\theta_E}{T} \ll 1 \), \( e^{\theta_E / T} \approx 1 + \frac{\theta_E}{T} \), so:
Thus:
This is the Dulong-Petit limit, \( 3R \) per mole.
Case 2: Low Temperature (\( T \ll \theta_E \))
When \( \frac{\theta_E}{T} \gg 1 \), \( e^{\theta_E / T} \gg 1 \), so:
The specific heat decreases exponentially, which overestimates the drop compared to the experimental \( T^3 \) behavior.
Explanation
The derivation assumes \( 3N \) harmonic oscillators vibrating at a single frequency, computes the quantum mechanical average energy, and derives the specific heat. The high-temperature case yields the classical limit, while the low-temperature case shows an exponential decay, a limitation improved by the Debye model.
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