
AbstractBasic ideas and results which characterize quantum diffusion of defects in quantum crystals like solid helium as a new phenomenon are presented. Quantum effects in such media lead to a delocalization of point defects (vacancies, impurities etc.) and they turn into quasiparticles of a new type—defectons, which are characterized not by their position in the crystal lattice but by their quasimomentum and dispersion law. Defecton-defecton and defecton-phonon scattering are considered and an interpolation formula for the diffusion coefficient valid in all interesting temperature and concentration regions is presented. A comparison with the experimental data is made. Some alternative points of view are discussed in detail and the inconsistency of the Kisvarsanyi-Sullivan theory is shown.
Condensed Matter - Materials Science, Physics, QC1-999, Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci), FOS: Physical sciences, 67.90, 67.80, solid helium, quantum diffusion, defectons
Condensed Matter - Materials Science, Physics, QC1-999, Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci), FOS: Physical sciences, 67.90, 67.80, solid helium, quantum diffusion, defectons
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