The Drude‐Smith Equation and Related Equations for the Frequency‐Dependent Electrical Conductivity of Materials: Insight from a Memory Function Formalism
Abstract
The Drude‐Smith equation is widely used for treating the frequency‐dependent electrical conductivity of materials in the terahertz region. An attractive feature is its sparsity of adjustable parameters. A significant improvement over Drude theory for these materials, the theory includes backscattering of the charge carriers. It has nevertheless been criticized, including by Smith himself, because of the arbitrariness of a step in the derivation. We recall a somewhat similar behavior of back scattering in fluids observed in molecular dynamics computations and discussed in terms of memory functions. We show how theories such as Drude‐Smith and Cocker et al. are examples of a broader class of theories by showing how they also arise as particular cases of a memory function formalism that divides the interactions into short and long range.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Jul 03, 2021
- Source ID
- 10.1002/cphc.202100299
Entities
People
- Rudolph A. Marcus
- Wei-Chen Chen
Organizations
- Army Research Office
- California Institute of Technology
- Office of Naval Research