Abstract

We present a theory of the total magnetic susceptibility ($\ensuremath{\chi}$) of interacting electrons in solids. We have included the effects of both the lattice potential and electron-electron interaction and constructed in $\stackrel{\ensuremath{\rightarrow}}{\mathrm{k}}$ space, using the Bloch representation, the effective one-particle Hamiltonian and the equation of motion of the Green's function in the presence of a magnetic field. We have used a finite-temperature Green's-function formalism where the thermodynamic potential $\ensuremath{\Omega}$ is expressed in terms of the exact one-particle propagator $G$ and have derived a general expression for $\ensuremath{\chi}$ by assuming the self-energy to be independent of frequency. We have calculated the many-body effects on orbital (${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{o}$), spin (${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{s}$), and spin-orbit (${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{\mathrm{so}}$) contributions to $\ensuremath{\chi}$. If we make simple approximations for the self-energy, our expression for ${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{o}$ reduces to the earlier results. If we make drastic assumptions while solving the matrix integral equations for the field-dependent part of the self-energy, our expression for ${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{s}$ is equivalent to the earlier results for exchange-enhanced spin susceptibility but with the $g$ factor replaced by the effective $g$ factor, a result which has been intuitively used but not yet rigorously derived. An important aspect of our work is the careful analysis of exchange and correlation effects on ${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{\mathrm{so}}$, the contribution to susceptibility from the effect of spin-orbit coupling on the orbital motion of Bloch electrons. Although ${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{\mathrm{so}}$ is of the same order of magnitude as ${\ensuremath{\chi}}_{s}$ for some metals and semiconductors, its contribution has been hitherto completely ignored in all the many-body theories of magnetic susceptibility. We have also shown that if we neglect electron-electron interactions our expression for $\ensuremath{\chi}$ agrees with the well-known results for noninteracting Bloch electrons.

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