Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Overview
- 2 Structure and scattering
- 3 Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics
- 4 Mean-field theory
- 5 Field theories, critical phenomena, and the renormalization group
- 6 Generalized elasticity
- 7 Dynamics: correlation and response
- 8 Hydrodynamics
- 9 Topological defects
- 10 Walls, kinks and solitons
- Glossary
- Index
4 - Mean-field theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Overview
- 2 Structure and scattering
- 3 Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics
- 4 Mean-field theory
- 5 Field theories, critical phenomena, and the renormalization group
- 6 Generalized elasticity
- 7 Dynamics: correlation and response
- 8 Hydrodynamics
- 9 Topological defects
- 10 Walls, kinks and solitons
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
In the preceding two chapters, we have discussed various types of order that can occur in nature and how the ordering process can be quantified by the introduction of order parameters. We also developed a formalism for dealing with the thermodynamics of ordered states. In this chapter, we will use mean-field theory to study phase transitions and the properties of various ordered phases. Mean-field theory is an approximation for the thermodynamic properties of a system based on treating the order parameter as spatially constant. It is a useful description if spatial fluctuations are not important. It becomes an exact theory only when the range of interactions becomes infinite. It, nevertheless, makes quantitatively correct predictions about some aspects of phase transitions (e.g. critical exponents) in high spatial dimensions where each particle or spin has many nearest neighbors, and it makes qualitatively correct predictions in physical dimensions. Mean-field theory has the enormous advantage of being mathematically simple, and it is almost invariably the first approach taken to predict phase diagrams and properties of new experimental systems.
Before proceeding, let us review some simple facts about phase transitions. At high temperatures, there is no order, and the order parameter 〈φ〉 is zero. At a critical temperature, Tc, order sets in so that, for temperatures below Tc, 〈φ〉 is nonzero. If 〈φ〉 rises continuously from zero, as shown in Fig. 4.0.1a, the transition is second order.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Principles of Condensed Matter Physics , pp. 144 - 212Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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