Drift Speed of Electrons in Conductor with Applied Field

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SUMMARY

The drift speed of electrons in a conductor under an applied electric field is defined as the net speed of electrons moving against the field direction. Initially, electrons have a random velocity, but after a time t, their speed can be described by the equation a = e(field)/mass of electron, where 'a' is the acceleration. The drift speed is not simply the average of initial and final speeds due to the non-constant acceleration of electrons in a conductor, particularly under direct current (DC) or alternating current (AC) conditions. The drift velocity represents the average speed of electrons after the electric field is established, influenced by electromagnetic forces and frictional forces, as discussed in "Physics" by Halliday, Resnick, and Krane, Volume 2, and further explored in Landau-Lifshitz Volume X.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of basic electromagnetism concepts, including electric fields and forces.
  • Familiarity with classical mechanics, particularly Newton's laws of motion.
  • Knowledge of statistical mechanics and quantum field theory principles.
  • Experience with transport phenomena and electrical conductivity in materials.
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the concept of drift velocity in conductors under varying electric fields.
  • Learn about the effects of alternating current (AC) on electron drift speed.
  • Explore Landau-Lifshitz Volume X for insights into classical and quantum transport phenomena.
  • Investigate correlation functions in statistical many-body quantum field theory.
USEFUL FOR

Physics students, electrical engineers, and researchers interested in the behavior of electrons in conductive materials and the principles governing electrical conductivity and transport phenomena.

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for an electron, randomly moving inside a conductor , having applied an external electric field we have those electrons moving with a net speed called drift speed , against the direction of field.
so initially as electrons are moving randomly we consider their initial velocity o
and after time t =at
where a = acc. of electrons = e(field)/mass of electron
t = mean time between consecutive collisions of electrons
courtesy PHYSICS by halliday resnick krane vol 2
but i don't understand why don't we average the initial and final speed of electrons ie
drift speed = (0 + at)/2
??
 
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The acceleration of an electron in a real conductor is not constant. I think when subjected to an electric field, the speed of the electrons increases monotonically up to its "steady-state" drift velocity. If the applied field is not changing (DC), then after an initial transient time, the electrons are flowing at the drift velocity. If the applied field is a sinusoidal function (AC), then the current (and thus drift velocity) will also vary sinusoidally. An accelerating charge (i.e. a varying current) establishes an electromagnetic wave.
 
I think drift speed is already an average since every electron will be moving at different speeds and constantly interacting with the material and the applied field.
 
For the acceleration happened just a moment (average), the drift velocity is the average speed electrons have in the conductor after the generation of the electric field.
 
The electron in a (normal) conductor is under the influence of the electromagnetic force and to a friction force. The notion of a friction force is already a coarse grained description of the full complicated dynamics of the many-body (quantum!) system. On the level of linear-response theory you come astonishingly far with very simple classical pictures introducing some phenomenological transport coefficients (like electric conductivity) and response functions. On a microscopic level, you have to calculate appropriate correlation functions in statistical many-body QFT. See Landau-Lifshitz vol. X for a very good introduction into both classical and quantum transport phenomena.
 

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