ABSTRACT

This chapter describes some of the most important theories of the strong-coupling polaron. The nature of polarons in the strong-coupling limit is in some sense qualitatively different from the weak or intermediate-coupling polaron—the localization of a polaron being a case in point. Though a qualitative picture of a strong-coupling polaron is easy to visualize as opposed to the weak-coupling polaron, the mathematical formulation of a strongly coupled polaron is rather a difficult problem from the quantum mechanical point of view. In fact, the exact polaron energy in the weak-coupling limit can be obtained from the Frohlich Hamiltonian analytically, while the same is not possible in the strong-coupling limit. In the strong-coupling case, the electron velocity is much larger than the phonon frequency and therefore electron can follow the ion motion adiabatically. The adiabatic expansion of the polaron energy in the strong-coupling regime was reported by Bogoliubov and Tiablikov.