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Evaluate the integrand in equation 7.112as a power series in x, keeping terms through x4• Then carry out the integral to find a more accurate expression for the energy in the high-temperature limit. Differentiate this expression to obtain the heat capacity, and use the result to estimate the percent deviation of Cvfrom3NkatT=TDandT=2TD.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The heat capacity isCv=3Nk1120TDT2and the percent deviation of Cvis1.25%.

Step by step solution

01

Given Information 

We need to find calculate the integrand in the equation7.112as a power series inxkeeping terms through x4.

02

Simplify

Equation is given as:

U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx3ex1dx

where,

x=hcsn2LkTxmax=TDT

at low-temperature limit TTD, the value of is very small so we can expand the exponential in the denominator using:

ex1+x+x2/2+x3/6

therefore:

U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx31+x+12x2+16x31U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx3x+12x2+16x3U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx21+12x+16x21

now we can use (1+y)11+y+y2, where y=12x16x2we get :

U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx2112x16x2+12x16x22U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx2112x16x2+14x2+136x4+16x3

neglect the xwith power of 3and4inside the bracket because x is very small ,so:

U=9NkT4TD30xmaxx212x3+112x4

now the function inside the integration is easy to be integrated, so integrate from 0to xmaxto get:

U=9NkT4TD313x318x4+160x50xmaxU=9NkT4TD313xmax318xmax4+160xmax5

but xmax=TTD, so,

U=9NkT4TD313TDT318TDT4+160TDT5U=9NkTD13TTD18+160TDT

the heat capacity at constant volume is the just the partial derivative of the energy with respect to the temperature, that is:

Cv=UT

thus,

localid="1650887002266" Cv=9NkTDT13TTD18+160TDTCv=9NkTD131TD160TDT2Cv=3Nk1120TDT2

03

Calculation

Now calculating the deviation from the asymptotic value 3NkT,atT=TD,

substitute into the above equation we get:

CVT=TD=3Nk1120TDTD2CVT=TD=0.953Nk

so it deviates by 5%AtT=2TD.

CVT=2TD=3Nk1120TD2TD2CVT=2TD=0.98753Nk

so it deviates by1.25%

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Consider a free Fermi gas in two dimensions, confined to a square area A=L2

(a) Find the Fermi energy (in terms of Nand A), and show that the average energy of the particles is F2.

(b) Derive a formula for the density of states. You should find that it is a constant, independent of .

(c) Explain how the chemical potential of this system should behave as a function of temperature, both when role="math" localid="1650186338941" kTFand when Tis much higher.

(d) Because gis a constant for this system, it is possible to carry out the integral 7.53 for the number of particles analytically. Do so, and solve for μas a function of N. Show that the resulting formula has the expected qualitative behavior.

(e) Show that in the high-temperature limit, kTF, the chemical potential of this system is the same as that of an ordinary ideal gas.

In analogy with the previous problem, consider a system of identical spin0bosonstrapped in a region where the energy levels are evenly spaced. Assume that Nis a large number, and again let qbe the number of energy units.

(a) Draw diagrams representing all allowed system states from q=0up to q=6.Instead of using dots as in the previous problem, use numbers to indicate the number of bosons occupying each level.

(b) Compute the occupancy of each energy level, for q=6. Draw a graph of the occupancy as a function of the energy at each level.

(c) Estimate values of μand Tthat you would have to plug into the Bose-Einstein distribution to best fit the graph of part(b).

(d) As in part (d) of the previous problem, draw a graph of entropy vs energy and estimate the temperature at q=6from this graph.

Suppose you have a "box" in which each particle may occupy any of 10single-particle states. For simplicity, assume that each of these states has energy zero.

(a) What is the partition function of this system if the box contains only one particle?

(b) What is the partition function of this system if the box contains two distinguishable particles?

(c) What is the partition function if the box contains two identical bosons?

(d) What is the partition function if the box contains two identical fermions?

(e) What would be the partition function of this system according to equation 7.16?

(f) What is the probability of finding both particles in the same single particle state, for the three cases of distinguishable particles, identical bosom, and identical fermions?

Consider a Bose gas confined in an isotropic harmonic trap, as in the previous problem. For this system, because the energy level structure is much simpler than that of a three-dimensional box, it is feasible to carry out the sum in equation 7.121 numerically, without approximating it as an integral.*

(a) Write equation 7.121 for this system as a sum over energy levels, taking degeneracy into account. Replace Tandμwith the dimensionless variables t=kT/hfandc=μ/hf.

(b) Program a computer to calculate this sum for any given values of tandc. Show that, for N=2000, equation 7.121 is satisfied at t=15provided that c=-10.534. (Hint: You'll need to include approximately the first 200 energy levels in the sum.)

(c) For the same parameters as in part (b), plot the number of particles in each energy level as a function of energy.

(d) Now reduce tto 14 , and adjust the value of cuntil the sum again equals 2000. Plot the number of particles as a function of energy.

(e) Repeat part (d) for t=13,12,11,and10. You should find that the required value of cincreases toward zero but never quite reaches it. Discuss the results in some detail.

Use the results of this section to estimate the contribution of conduction electrons to the heat capacity of one mole of copper at room temperature. How does this contribution compare to that of lattice vibrations, assuming that these are not frozen out? (The electronic contribution has been measured at low temperatures, and turns out to be about40% more than predicted by the free electron model used here.)

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