Debye Temperature Calculator

Estimate vibrational limits with flexible material inputs. Compare velocities, densities, and derived lattice parameters easily. Turn raw measurements into useful Debye insights with confidence.

Calculator Form

If entered, this value overrides the two velocity fields below.
Use 2 for a binary compound like NaCl.
Reset

Formula Used

Debye temperature from mean sound velocity

ΘD = (ħ / kB) × vm × (6π²n)1/3

Where ΘD is Debye temperature, vm is mean sound velocity, and n is atomic number density.

Mean sound velocity from longitudinal and transverse values

vm = { (1/3) × [2 / vt3 + 1 / vl3] }-1/3

Use this relation when the average sound velocity is not entered directly.

Atomic number density from material properties

n = (ρ / M) × NA × z

ρ is density, M is molar mass, NA is Avogadro’s number, and z is atoms per formula unit.

The calculator also reports Debye wavevector, Debye frequency, and Debye energy to help compare vibrational behavior across different materials.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select a calculation mode. Use material properties when density and molar mass are known.
  2. Enter either mean sound velocity directly, or supply longitudinal and transverse velocities.
  3. For material mode, fill density, density unit, molar mass, and atoms per formula unit.
  4. For direct mode, enter atomic number density and choose the matching unit.
  5. Click the calculate button to display the result below the header and above the form.
  6. Review the derived physical quantities and use the CSV or PDF buttons to export the results.

Example Data Table

Illustrative values for typical materials are shown below.

Material Density (kg/m³) Molar Mass (g/mol) vl (m/s) vt (m/s) Approx. ΘD (K)
Aluminum 2700 26.98 6420 3040 399.25
Copper 8960 63.55 4760 2325 341.76
Silicon 2330 28.09 8433 5843 696.76

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does Debye temperature represent?

Debye temperature is a characteristic temperature linked to a solid’s lattice vibrations. Higher values usually indicate stiffer bonding, higher phonon frequencies, and different low-temperature heat-capacity behavior.

2. Why are sound velocities used here?

Elastic waves move through a crystal using the same lattice that supports phonons. Because of that link, sound velocity provides a practical path to estimate the Debye cutoff and the associated Debye temperature.

3. What is atomic number density?

Atomic number density is the number of atoms per unit volume. It matters because the Debye model depends on how many vibrational states fit inside a given crystal volume.

4. Should I enter mean velocity or longitudinal and transverse velocities?

Enter mean sound velocity only when you already know it. Otherwise, supply longitudinal and transverse values so the calculator can derive the physically appropriate mean sound velocity.

5. Why does the result change linearly with mean sound velocity?

In the displayed formula, Debye temperature is directly proportional to mean sound velocity when number density stays fixed. That is why the Plotly graph forms a straight line.

6. Can I use this for compounds and ceramics?

Yes. For compounds, set atoms per formula unit correctly. For example, a binary compound with one atom of each species would use two atoms per formula unit.

7. Are the example values exact reference data?

No. The table is illustrative and intended to show typical input scales and expected output ranges. Experimental results vary with temperature, purity, crystallinity, and measurement method.

8. What can I learn from comparing Debye temperatures?

Comparing Debye temperatures helps you judge relative lattice stiffness, vibrational energy scales, and low-temperature thermal trends. It is useful when screening materials for thermal and solid-state applications.

Related Calculators

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.