Effective mass Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In solid state physics, a particle's effective mass is the mass it seems to carry in the semiclassical model of transport in a crystal. It can be shown that, under most conditions, electrons and holes in a crystal respond to electric and magnetic fields almost as if they were free particles in a vacuum, but with a different mass. This mass is usually stated in units of the ordinary mass of an electron me (9.11×10-31 kg).
Effective mass is defined by analogy with Newton's second law F=m a. Using quantum mechanics it can be shown that for an electron in an external electric field E:
In energy regions far away from a minimum, effective mass can be negative or even approach infinity. Effective mass, being generally dependent on direction (with respect to the crystal axes), is a tensor. However, for most calculations the various directions can be averaged out.
Effective mass should not be confused with reduced mass, which is a concept from Newtonian mechanics. Effective mass can only be understood with quantum mechanics.
Effective mass for some common semiconductors (for density of states calculations)
| Material | Electron effective mass | Hole effective mass |
|---|---|---|
| Silicon | 0.36 me | 0.81 me |
| Gallium arsenide | 0.067 me | 0.45 me |
| Germanium | 0.55 me | 0.37 me |
