Visible to the public Symmetric Eigen-Wavefunctions of Quantum Dot Bound States Resulting from Geometric Confinement

TitleSymmetric Eigen-Wavefunctions of Quantum Dot Bound States Resulting from Geometric Confinement
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsLi, Wei, Belling, Samuel W.
Conference Name2018 IEEE International Conference on Electro/Information Technology (EIT)
Date Publishedmay
ISBN Number978-1-5386-5398-2
Keywordsbound states, composability, computational geometry, confinement, crystal periodic structure, crystal structure, Crystals, cyber-physical system, Cyber-physical systems, Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions, Ellipsoids, finite element analysis, geometric confinement, group representation theory, group theory, intrinsic geometric symmetry, privacy, pubcrawl, quantum dot bound states, quantum dot shapes, quantum dot symmetry related effects, Quantum dots, resilience, Resiliency, semiconductor quantum dots, Shape, Strain, symmetric eigen-wavefunctions, Symmetric matrices, symmetric properties, symmetry, wave functions
Abstract

Self-assembled semiconductor quantum dots possess an intrinsic geometric symmetry due to the crystal periodic structure. In order to systematically analyze the symmetric properties of quantum dots' bound states resulting only from geometric confinement, we apply group representation theory. We label each bound state for two kinds of popular quantum dot shapes: pyramid and half ellipsoid with the irreducible representation of the corresponding symmetric groups, i.e., C4v and C2v, respectively. Our study completes all the possible irreducible representation cases of groups C4v and C2v. Using the character theory of point groups, we predict the selection rule for electric dipole induced transitions. We also investigate the impact of quantum dot aspect ratio on the symmetric properties of the state wavefunction. This research provides a solid foundation to continue exploring quantum dot symmetry reduction or broken phenomena because of strain, band-mixing and shape irregularity. The results will benefit the researchers who are interested in quantum dot symmetry related effects such as absorption or emission spectra, or those who are studying quantum dots using analytical or numerical simulation approaches.

URLhttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8500244
DOI10.1109/EIT.2018.8500244
Citation Keyli_symmetric_2018