Exchange interaction


In chemistry and physics, the exchange interaction is a quantum mechanical effect that only occurs between identical particles. Despite sometimes being called an exchange force in an analogy to classical force, it is not a true force as it lacks a force carrier.
The effect is due to the wave function of indistinguishable particles being subject to exchange symmetry, that is, either remaining unchanged or changing sign when two particles are exchanged. Both bosons and fermions can experience the exchange interaction. For fermions, this interaction is sometimes called Pauli repulsion and is related to the Pauli exclusion principle. For bosons, the exchange interaction takes the form of an effective attraction that causes identical particles to be found closer together, as in Bose–Einstein condensation.
The exchange interaction alters the expectation value of the distance when the wave functions of two or more indistinguishable particles overlap. This interaction increases or decreases the expectation value of the distance between identical particles. Among other consequences, the exchange interaction is responsible for ferromagnetism and the volume of matter. It has no classical analogue.
Exchange interaction effects were discovered independently by physicists Werner Heisenberg and Paul Dirac in 1926.

"Force" description

The exchange interaction is sometimes called the exchange force. However, it is not a true force and should not be confused with the exchange forces produced by the exchange of force carriers, such as the electromagnetic force produced between two electrons by the exchange of a photon, or the strong force between two quarks produced by the exchange of a gluon.
Although sometimes erroneously described as a force, the exchange interaction is a purely quantum mechanical effect unlike other forces.

Exchange interactions between localized electron magnetic moments

Quantum mechanical particles are classified as bosons or fermions. The spin–statistics theorem of quantum field theory demands that all particles with half-integer spin behave as fermions and all particles with integer spin behave as bosons. Multiple bosons may occupy the same quantum state; however, by the Pauli exclusion principle, no two fermions can occupy the same state. Since electrons have spin 1/2, they are fermions. This means that the overall wave function of a system must be antisymmetric when two electrons are exchanged, i.e. interchanged with respect to both spatial and spin coordinates. First, however, exchange will be explained with the neglect of spin.

Exchange of spatial coordinates

Taking a hydrogen molecule-like system, one may attempt to model the state of each electron by first assuming the electrons behave independently, and taking wave functions in position space of for the first electron and for the second electron. We assume that and are orthogonal, and that each corresponds to an energy eigenstate of its electron. Now, one may construct a wave function for the overall system in position space by using an antisymmetric combination of the product wave functions in position space:
Alternatively, we may also construct the overall position–space wave function by using a symmetric combination of the product wave functions in position space:
Treating the exchange interaction in the hydrogen molecule by the perturbation method, the overall Hamiltonian is:
where and
The terms in parentheses correspond to: proton–proton repulsion, electron–electron repulsion, and electron–proton attraction. All quantities are assumed to be real.
Two eigenvalues for the system energy are found:
where the E+ is the spatially symmetric solution and E is the spatially antisymmetric solution. A variational calculation yields similar results. can be diagonalized by using the position–space functions given by Eqs. and. In Eq., C is the two-site two-electron Coulomb integral, is negative, Heisenberg first suggested that it changes sign at some critical ratio of internuclear distance to mean radial extension of the atomic orbital.

Inclusion of spin

The symmetric and antisymmetric combinations in Equations and did not include the spin variables ; there are also antisymmetric and symmetric combinations of the spin variables:
To obtain the overall wave function, these spin combinations have to be coupled with Eqs. and. The resulting overall wave functions, called spin-orbitals, are written as Slater determinants. When the orbital wave function is symmetrical the spin one must be anti-symmetrical and vice versa. Accordingly, E+ above corresponds to the spatially symmetric/spin-singlet solution and E to the spatially antisymmetric/spin-triplet solution.
J. H. Van Vleck presented the following analysis:
Dirac pointed out that the critical features of the exchange interaction could be obtained in an elementary way by neglecting the first two terms on the right-hand side of Eq., thereby considering the two electrons as simply having their spins coupled by a potential of the form:
It follows that the exchange interaction Hamiltonian between two electrons in orbitals Φa and Φb can be written in terms of their spin momenta and. This is named the Heisenberg exchange Hamiltonian or the Heisenberg–Dirac Hamiltonian in the older literature:
Jab is not the same as the quantity labeled Jex in Eq.. Rather, Jab, which is termed the exchange constant, is a function of Eqs.,, and, namely,
However, with orthogonal orbitals, for example with different orbitals in the same atom, Jab = Jex.

Effects of exchange

If Jab is positive the exchange energy favors electrons with parallel spins; this is a primary cause of ferromagnetism in materials in which the electrons are considered localized in the Heitler–London model of chemical bonding, but this model of ferromagnetism has severe limitations in solids. If Jab is negative, the interaction favors electrons with antiparallel spins, potentially causing antiferromagnetism. The sign of Jab is essentially determined by the relative sizes of Jex and the product of CS2. This can be deduced from the expression for the difference between the energies of the triplet and singlet states, EE+:
Although these consequences of the exchange interaction are magnetic in nature, the cause is not; it is due primarily to electric repulsion and the Pauli exclusion principle. In general, the direct magnetic interaction between a pair of electrons is negligibly small compared to this electric interaction.
Exchange energy splittings are very elusive to calculate for molecular systems at large internuclear distances. However, analytical formulae have been worked out for the hydrogen molecular ion.
Normally, exchange interactions are very short-ranged, confined to electrons in orbitals on the same atom or nearest neighbor atoms but longer-ranged interactions can occur via intermediary atoms and this is termed superexchange.

Direct exchange interactions in solids

In a crystal, generalization of the Heisenberg Hamiltonian in which the sum is taken over the exchange Hamiltonians for all the pairs of atoms of the many-electron system gives:.
The 1/2 factor is introduced because the interaction between the same two atoms is counted twice in performing the sums. Note that the J in Eq. is the exchange constant Jab above not the exchange integral Jex. The exchange integral Jex is related to yet another quantity, called the exchange stiffness constant which serves as a characteristic of a ferromagnetic material. The relationship is dependent on the crystal structure. For a simple cubic lattice with lattice parameter,
For a body-centered cubic lattice,
and for a face-centered cubic lattice,
The form of Eq. corresponds identically to the Ising model of ferromagnetism except that in the Ising model, the dot product of the two spin angular momenta is replaced by the scalar product SijSji. The Ising model was invented by Wilhelm Lenz in 1920 and solved for the one-dimensional case by his doctoral student Ernst Ising in 1925. The energy of the Ising model is defined to be:

Limitations of the Heisenberg Hamiltonian and the localized electron model in solids

Because the Heisenberg Hamiltonian presumes the electrons involved in the exchange coupling are localized in the context of the Heitler–London, or valence bond, theory of chemical bonding, it is an adequate model for explaining the magnetic properties of electrically insulating narrow-band ionic and covalent non-molecular solids where this picture of the bonding is reasonable. Nevertheless, theoretical evaluations of the exchange integral for non-molecular solids that display metallic conductivity in which the electrons responsible for the ferromagnetism are itinerant have historically been either of the wrong sign or much too small in magnitude to account for the experimentally determined exchange constant. The Heisenberg model thus cannot explain the observed ferromagnetism in these materials. In these cases, a delocalized, or Hund–Mulliken–Bloch description, for the electron wave functions is more realistic. Accordingly, the Stoner model of ferromagnetism is more applicable. In the Stoner model, the spin-only magnetic moment per atom in a ferromagnet is given by the difference between the number of electrons per atom in the majority spin and minority spin states. The Stoner model thus permits non-integral values for the spin-only magnetic moment per atom. However, with ferromagnets tends to overestimate the total spin-only magnetic moment per atom. For example, a net magnetic moment of 0.54 μB per atom for Nickel metal is predicted by the Stoner model, which is very close to the 0.61 Bohr magnetons calculated based on the metal's observed saturation magnetic induction, its density, and its atomic weight. By contrast, an isolated Ni atom in a cubic crystal field will have two unpaired electrons of the same spin and would thus be expected to have in the localized electron model a total spin magnetic moment of . Generally, valence s and p electrons are best considered delocalized, while 4f electrons are localized and 5f and 3d/4d electrons are intermediate, depending on the particular internuclear distances. In the case of substances where both delocalized and localized electrons contribute to the magnetic properties, the Ruderman–Kittel–Kasuya–Yosida model is the currently accepted mechanism.