Matthiessen's rule

Matthiessen's rule

An empirical rule which states that the total resistivity of a crystalline metallic specimen is the sum of the resistivity due to thermal agitation of the metal ions of the lattice and the resistivity due to the presence of imperfections in the crystal. This rule is a basis for understanding the resistivity behavior of metals and alloys at low temperatures.

The resistivity of a metal results from the scattering of conduction electrons. Lattice vibrations scatter electrons because the vibrations distort the crystal. Imperfections such as impurity atoms, interstitials, dislocations, and grain boundaries scatter conduction electrons because in their immediate vicinity the electrostatic potential differs from that of the perfect crystal.

Matthiessen's rule

[′math·ə·sənz ‚rül] (solid-state physics) An empirical rule which states that the total resistivity of a crystalline metallic specimen is the sum of the resistivity due to thermal agitation of the metal ions of the lattice and the resistivity due to imperfections in the crystal.