nertil1 said:
So does that mean that it depends on the type of wire used? I want to know in terms of physics.
Yes, the drift velocity depends on the type of wire used. Electrons are accelerated by the applied electric field, but scatter off of thermal vibrations ("phonons"). Accordingly, wire resistance drops, and drift velocity rises, with temperature, until reaching constant values due to frequent collisions with impurities and imperfections in the metal crystal. This occurs near absolute zero for pure metals, at higher temperatures for less pure metals.
If the metal is impure enough, then impurity scattering and collisions dominate. Pure annealed copper is a terrific conductor (annealing relieves stresses and produces good crystal structure), quenched pure copper has poorer crystal structure and worse conductivity, and brass (which is copper with zinc added) is worse yet.
Finally, drift velocity is directly proportional to the applied electric field.
Here's a web page that may be useful:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/electric/ohmmic.html"