Condensed Matter Physics
Transport and Mesoscopic Physics
Instructor: Norman Birge
126 Physics & Astronomy, 353-8746
birge@pa.msu.edu
This course will give an overview of basic transport theory, picking up where Physics 871 left off. Then it will provide an introduction to the field of mesoscopic physics. The treatment will be phenomenological, without Green’s functions.
Note change in Course Meeting Time and Place!
Tuesday, 2:30-3:50 & Thursday, 4:10-5:30, Room 209
Grading
Homework: 40%; Final paper and oral presentation: 60%
Textbooks:
Basic transport theory: Every student should own one of the following standard texts:
Condensed Matter Physics,
by Michael Marder
Solid State Physics,
by Neil Ashcroft and N. David Mermin
Principles of the Theory
of Solids, by J.M. Ziman
Mesoscopic physics: I will use material from both of the following books:
Electron Transport in
Mesoscopic Systems, by Supriyo Datta
Introduction to Mesoscopic
Physics, by Yoseph Imry
Topics:
I. Semiclassical Transport in Solids
A. Drude model, effective mass, wave packets
B. The Boltzmann equation
C. Fermi liquid theory
D. Semiconductor Electronics: diode, MOSFET
II. Preliminary Concepts
A. The Metal-Insulator Transition
B. Disorder: The Scaling Theory of Localization
C. Electron Phase Coherence
III. Mesoscopic Physics
A. Conductance by Transmission – the Landauer Formula
1. Ballistic transport:
conductance quantization
2. Diffusive transport:
universal conductance fluctuations
3. Tunnel junctions
B. Quantum Hall Effect
C. Coulomb Blockade
IV. Optional Topics
A. Transport through quantum dots
B. Atomic point contacts
C. Andreev reflection and mesoscopic superconductivity
D. Noise in mesoscopic systems