Properties of materials such as
electrical conduction and
heat capacity are investigated by solid state physics. An early model of electrical conduction was the
Drude model, which applied
kinetic theory to the
electrons in a solid. By assuming that the material contains immobile positive ions and an "electron gas" of classical, non-interacting electrons, the Drude model was able to explain electrical and
thermal conductivity and the
Hall effect in metals, although it greatly overestimated the electronic heat capacity.
Arnold Sommerfeld combined the classical Drude model with
quantum mechanics in the
free electron model (or Drude-Sommerfeld model). Here, the electrons are modelled as a
Fermi gas, a gas of particles which obey the quantum mechanical
Fermi–Dirac statistics. The free electron model gave improved predictions for the heat capacity of metals, however, it was unable to explain the existence of
insulators. The
nearly free electron model is a modification of the free electron model which includes a weak periodic
perturbation meant to model the interaction between the conduction electrons and the ions in a crystalline solid. By introducing the idea of
electronic bands, the theory explains the existence of
conductors,
semiconductors and
insulators. The nearly free electron model rewrites the
Schrödinger equation for the case of a periodic
potential. The solutions in this case are known as
Bloch states. Since
Bloch's theorem applies only to periodic potentials, and since unceasing random movements of atoms in a crystal disrupt periodicity, this use of Bloch's theorem is only an approximation, but it has proven to be a tremendously valuable approximation, without which most solid-state physics analysis would be intractable. Deviations from periodicity are treated by quantum mechanical
perturbation theory. ==Modern research==