Level 4 · Advanced undergraduate teaching kit · Third- and fourth-year university
Condensed matter, superconductivity, and coherent states
Use the learner record during the live investigation, then use the instructor guide to facilitate comparison, address misconceptions, and assess evidence-bounded reasoning.
Learner lab record
Band-structure gap and effective-mass study
How do lattice coupling and filling reshape free-particle motion into bands, gaps, and effective quasiparticle response?
Setup
Use the band-structure laboratory. Establish the uncoupled dispersion, increase the periodic coupling, then compare gap size, curvature, filling, and transport interpretation.
Predict first
- 1. Predict where a periodic potential opens a gap.
- 2. Predict how flatter band curvature changes effective mass magnitude.
| Variable | Role | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Lattice spacing and coupling | model inputs | length and energy |
| Wavevector | state coordinate | 1/length |
| Band energy and gap | dependent spectrum | eV |
| Band curvature/effective mass | dependent response | energy·length² and mass |
Observation columns
Analyze
- 1. Which symmetry point hosts the gap?
- 2. How does coupling change the avoided crossing?
- 3. Why does band filling matter for conduction?
- 4. Why does an effective metric analogy not imply modified fundamental spacetime?
Conclusion frame
Increasing lattice coupling from ___ to ___ changed the zone-boundary gap from ___ to ___ and local curvature ___; the transport implication is ___.
Instructor guide · 55–75 minutes
Teach the investigation, not the interface
Learning target: Learners connect periodic structure to bands, gaps, filling, and effective mass while respecting the boundary between material analogies and spacetime geometry.
Prepare
- • Review reciprocal space and Brillouin-zone boundaries.
- • Sketch the free-electron folded dispersion.
- • Define curvature-based effective mass.
Facilitation moves
- • Start from the uncoupled limit.
- • Ask which states hybridize at the avoided crossing.
- • Separate spectrum, filling, and scattering contributions to transport.
Accessibility and participation
- • Pair dispersion plots with energy tables at named symmetry points.
- • Use line style and labels rather than color alone.
- • Offer a real-space lattice sketch alongside reciprocal-space notation.
Evidence of learning
- • An uncoupled-versus-coupled comparison
- • A gap and curvature calculation
- • An effective-versus-fundamental geometry distinction
Misconception checks
A band gap means no electron states exist at any energy.
The gap separates allowed bands over a specified crystal momentum structure; other bands and excitations may exist.
Effective mass or analog curvature changes fundamental gravity.
It describes quasiparticle response inside a material model unless an independent gravitational observable is demonstrated.
Extension
Change filling through the gap and predict the idealized conductor-to-insulator transition before adding scattering or interactions.