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Nanophysics II Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005
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Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Jan 18, 2018

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3b. Surfaces and Interfaces – Electronic Structure 3.3. Electronic Structure of Surfaces 3.4. Structure of Interfaces
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Page 1: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Nanophysics IINanophysics IIMichael Hietschold

Solid Surfaces Analysis Group &Electron Microscopy Laboratory

Institute of Physics

Portland State University, May 2005

Page 2: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

2nd Lecture

3b. Surfaces and Interfaces – Electronic Structure3.3. Electronic Structure of Surfaces3.4. Structure of Interfaces4. Semiconductor Heterostructures4.1. Quantum Wells4.2. Tunnelling Structures

Page 3: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

3b. Surfaces and Interfaces – Electronic Structure

3.3. Electronic Structure of Surfaces

3.4. Structure of Interfaces

Page 4: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

3.3. Electronic Structure of Surfaces

Projected Energy Band Structure:

Lattice not any longer periodic along the sur-face normal

k┴ not any longer a goodquantum number

- Projected bulk bands

- Surface state bands

Page 5: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Surface States

Two types of electronic states:

- Truncated bulk states

- Surface states

Page 6: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Surface states splitting from semiconductor bulkbands may act as additional donor or acceptor states

Page 7: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Interplay with Surface Reconstruction

The appearance and occupation of surfacestate bands may ener-getically favour specialsurface reconstruc-tions

Page 8: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

3.4. Structure of Interfaces

General Principle:µ1 = µ2 in thermodynamic equilibrium

1 2

For electrons this means, there should be a common Fermi level !

Page 9: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Metal-Metal Interfaces

Adjustment of Fermi levels –

Contact potential

ΔV12 = Φ2 – Φ1

Page 10: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Metal – Semiconductor Interfaces

Small density of free electrons in the semiconductor –

Considerable screening length (Debye length) –

Band bending

Schottky barrier at the interface

Page 11: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Semiconductor-Semiconductor Interfaces

Within small distances from the interface (and at low doping levels)

- band bending may be neglected

- rigid band edges; effective square-well potentials for the electrons and holes.

Ec1 Ec2

Ev1

Ev2

EF1 EF2 EF

Page 12: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

4. Semiconductor Heterostructures

4.1. Quantum Wells

4.2. Tunnelling Structures

4.3. Superlattices

Page 13: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

4.1. Quantum Wells

Effective potential structures consisting of well definedsemiconductor-semiconductor interfaces

z

E

Ec

Ev

Ideal crystalline interfaces –Epitaxy

GaAs/AlxGa1-xAs

Page 14: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Preparation by Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE)

Allows controlled deposition of atomic monolayers and complex structures consisting of them

- UHV- slow deposition (close to equilibrium)- dedicated in-situ analysis

Page 15: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

One-dimensional quantum well – from a stupid exercise inquantum mechanics (calculating the stationary bound states)for a fictituous system to real samples and device structures

- V0

0

E

-a 0 a

[ - ħ2/2m d2/dx2 + V(x) ] φ(x) = E φ(x)

solving by ansatz method

A+ cos (kx) | x | < aφ+(x) = A+ cos (ka) eκ (a - x) x > a

A+ cos (ka) eκ (a + x) x < - a,

A- sin (kx) | x | < aφ-(x) = A- sin (ka) eκ (a - x) x > a - A- sin (ka) eκ (a + x) x < - a

κ = √ - 2m E / ħ2, k = √ 2m {E – (- V0)} / ħ2 .  

Page 16: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

From stationary Schroedinger`s equation (smoothly matching the ansatz wave functions as well as their 1st derivatives):

| cos (ka) / ( ka ) | = 1 / C tan (ka) > 0

| sin (ka) / (ka) | = 1 / C tan (ka) < 0

C2 = 2mV0 / ħ2 a2 .

Graphical represenationdiscrete stationary solutions

1 / C

Page 17: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Finite number of stationary bound states

Eigenfunctions and energy level spectrum

Page 18: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Dependence of the energy spectrum on the parameter

C2 = 2mV0 / ħ2 a2

Page 19: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Quantum Dots – Superatoms (spherical symmetry)

Can be prepared e.g.by self-organizedisland growth

Page 20: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

E

V(x)V0

s

4.2. Tunneling Structures

Tunneling through a potential well

Page 21: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Tunneling probability

Wave function within the wall (classically „forbidden“)

φin wall ~ exp (- κ s); κ = √2m(V0-E)/ħ2

 Transmission probability

T ~ |φ(s)|2 ~ exp (- 2 κ s)

For solid state physics barrier heights of a few eVthere is measurable tunneling for s of a few nm only.

Page 22: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

Resonance tunneling

double-barrier structure

If E corresponds to the energy of a (quasistationary)state within the double-barrierT goes to 1 !!!

Interference effectsimilar to Fabry-Perotinterferometer

Page 23: Nanophysics II Michael Hietschold Solid Surfaces Analysis Group & Electron Microscopy Laboratory Institute of Physics Portland State University, May 2005.

I-V characteristics shows negative differential resistance

I

U

NDR