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The contribution of the electron-electron Coulomb repulsion
to the overall electron-electron interaction in a metal is not
well understood. The topic will not be reviewed in detail here, but
a short introduction to the typical parametrization is given below
following a mainly qualitative discussion of the interaction.
First, notice that the electron-electron Coulomb interaction (at least for
independent electrons) is clearly repulsive, as their charge is
of the same sign. This is in contrast to the electron-phonon
interaction which can be effectively attractive.
The electron-phonon interaction in metals (Eq. 1.4)
is a model for the electrostatic (screening) interaction
between the system of ions and conduction electrons.
In typical metals, the screening response of the lattice is much slower than
the response of the electron system. This is just the Adiabatic Approximation
which, according to Migdal's Theorem,
applies in the limit where the Debye energy, ED,
is much smaller than the Fermi Energy. Typically this holds because
the ion masses are much larger than the electronic mass.
The ``retarded'' response of the lattice causes the electron interaction to
aqcuire energy dependence. In particular, for electrons differing in energy
by more than ED, the interaction is negligible, and for electrons
close in energy, the interaction can be strong and can become
negative, i.e. attractive.
To make a complete model for the net interaction between electrons
in a metal, one must also consider the effect of (self)screening of the
electrons. The effect of the Coulomb repulsion is to introduce a halo
of positive charge around an electron. Screening of this kind modifies the
Coulomb interaction from the unscreened form (Eq. 1.1) to
where is the effective dynamic dielectric response function of the
medium which we consider here to be just the conduction electrons.
The effect of screening is always to limit the (infinite) range
of the interaction. The co-ordinate space screened interaction will
fall off exponentially with a characteristic screening length scale,
e.g. the Thomas-Fermi length which
is typically less than 1Å. The screening is complete for length
scales large in comparison to rTF, i.e. for wavevectors much
smaller than . The limited range of the
screened interaction leads naturally to
simplified local models, such as the Hubbard model. In this kind of
model the electron-electron repulsion is parametrized by a single
number which is essentially the repulsive energy cost of bringing two
electrons close together
(i.e. onto the same site or separated by a distance
less than the screening length). The magnitude of this energy,
which is conventionally denoted U, depends
on the full screened electron-electron interaction including both
the electron-phonon and electron-electron terms.
An upper bound for U can be estimated by simply calculating the
unscreened Coulomb energy required to bring two electrons to some
minimal distance. The effect of screening by the two media (the positive
lattice and the negative electrons) is to reduce this energy.
An appropriate dimensionless measure of U is
where g(0) is the density of states per energy per spin.
A simple treatment of screening (e.g. see [53])
leads to a renormalization of this
energy to the conventional parameter known as the
``Coulomb Pseudopotential'', (e.g. Eq. 1.9).
Thus, in the limit where , ,and thus for all typical metals .In the theory leading to this result, the electron-electron repulsion
is only added after the electron-phonon interaction. Recently,
there has been a theoretical attempt to treat these interactions
on a more equal footing[54]. These authors find that at low
electron density (such as in molecular metals), there are
significant deviations from the McMillan equation (Eq. 1.9) /
result.
Next: 1.4.5 Pairing Mechanism in
Up: 1.4 Structure and Properties AC
Previous: 1.4.3 Strong-Coupling Theory of