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S - 1 .Density of States in 2D, 1D and 0D

The document discusses the density of states in systems with different dimensions, including 2D, 1D and 0D. It explains that density of states depends on the available quantum states, and as dimensions are reduced the density of states changes from being dependent on energy in 3D to being independent of energy in 2D and taking the form of delta functions in 0D.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
94 views18 pages

S - 1 .Density of States in 2D, 1D and 0D

The document discusses the density of states in systems with different dimensions, including 2D, 1D and 0D. It explains that density of states depends on the available quantum states, and as dimensions are reduced the density of states changes from being dependent on energy in 3D to being independent of energy in 2D and taking the form of delta functions in 0D.

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DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS AND NANOTECHNOLOGY

SRM INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY


18PYB103J –Semiconduuctor Physics

MODULE 5
S-1
.Density of states in 2D, 1D and 0D

1
18PYB101J Module-V Lecture-1
Density Of States
• The density of states function describes the number of
energy states that are available in a system and is
essential for determine the carrier concentrations and
energy distributions of carriers within a
semiconductor.
• In semiconductors, the free motion of carriers is
limited to two, one and zero spatial dimensions.
When applying semiconductor statistics to systems of
these dimensions, the density of states in quantum
well (2D), quantum wires (1D) and quantum dots
(0D) must be known.
2
Density of states in 3D
The number of allowed single-particle (electron/ hole) states
with energies between E and E+dE, in an element of
length/area/volume.

3
Density of states in
lower-dimensional systems
• Three-dimensional electron or hole obtained by doping semiconductors are
not ideal for studying quantum effects for two reasons: (i) they are strongly
disordered owing to the background of ionized impurities and (ii) the most
quantum effects are more pronounced in lower-dimensional systems than
those of bulk constituents.
• Therefore, reduction in the dimensionality of a physical system has
profound consequences on its profile and new types of electronic and
photonic devices can be designed. These devices make use of electron
motion through potentials that change rapidly on a length scale comparable
to the wavelength associated with the electron and they operate on the rules
of quantum mechanics.
• The low dimensional semiconductor systems play a critical role in
determining the properties of materials due to the different ways that
electrons interact in two-dimensional, one-dimensional and
zero-dimensional structures.
4
Density of states in
lower-dimensional systems
• A low-dimensional system is one where the motion of microscopic
degrees-of-freedom, such as electrons, phonons or photons, is restricted
from exploring the full three dimensions of the present world.
• In the low dimensional quantum systems such as Quantum well, Quantum
wire and Quantum dot, the charge carriers are free to move in two, one and
zero dimensions respectively.
• This high confinement brings out new effects of great technological
potential applications. Quantum mechanics plays a major role as the
semiconductor size approaches the nanoscale.
• The main advantages of these low dimensional semiconductor systems are
in the realizations of important devices, like the double heterostructure
lasers with low threshold at room temperature, high effective LEDs, bipolar
transistors, p-n-p-n switching devices, high electron mobility transistors
(HEMT) and many other optoelectronic devices.

5
Density of states in 2D
• Quantum effects arise in systems which confine electrons to
regions comparable to their de Broglie wavelength. When such
confinement occurs in one dimension only (say, by a
restriction on the motion of the electron in the z-direction),
with free motion in the x- and y-directions, a two-dimensional
system is created.
• Consider a slab of material that has macroscopic dimensions in
the x- and y directions while the thickness is small (in the
nanometer range-Quantum Well).

6
Density of states in 2D

7
Density of states in 2D

8
Density of states in 2D
• It is important to notice that the 2D density of states is
independent of the energy. However, DOS depends on the
number of levels and is thus a sum of the contributions from
the discrete levels appearing as a result of the quantization.

9
Density of states in 1D
• Quantum effects in systems which confine
electrons to regions comparable to their de
Broglie wavelength. When such confinement
occurs in two dimensions only (say, by two
restrictions on the motion of the electron in the
z- and y-directions), with free motion in the
x-direction, a one-dimensional system is
created.

10
Density of states in 1D
• Consider a systems where electrons are free to
move in one direction and confined in the
other two directions (Quantum wire).
• In one dimension two of the k-components are
fixed, therefore the area of k-space becomes a
length and the area of the annulus becomes
a line.

11
Density of states in 1D
• k-space Visualization: The allowed quantum
states can be visualized as a 1D grid of points
in the entire “k-space”
• Looking at the figure, in k-space there is only
one grid point in every small length of size:
(2∏/L)

12
Density of states in 1D

13
Density of states in 1D

14
Density of states in 1D

15
Density of states in 0D
• Electrons can be confined in all three dimensions in a
dot. The situation is analogous to that of a hydrogen
atom: only discrete energy levels are possible for
electrons trapped by such a zero-dimensional
potential. The spacing of these levels depends on the
precise shape of the potential.
• When considering the density of states for a 0D
structure (Quantum dot), no k – space is available as
all dimensions are reduced.

16
Density of states in 0D
• Therefore DOS of 0D can be expressed as a
delta function

17
Conclusion

18

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