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8 - Electron–Optical Phonon Interaction in a Quantum Well

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2009

B. K. Ridley
Affiliation:
University of Essex
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Summary

There's some that swear by whisky,

There's some that swear by rye,

There's some that swear by A.p,

And others by .

On Seeing the Light, B. K. Ridley

Introduction

An electron in a quantum-well subband can be scattered to another state in the same subband or into a state in another subband. Intrasubband and intersubband scattering rates have to be calculated separately since different wavefunction symmetries are involved in the two cases, and this implies correspondingly different symmetries of the optical mode. For simplicity we will assume that the electrons are completely confined within the well and that the interaction is with polar-optical modes. In the case of LO modes in a polar material this interaction is via a scalar potential. However, as we will see, it is possible in the unretarded limit (velocity of light is infinite) to replace the vector potential of the electromagnetic interface wave with a scalar potential via a unitary transformation (not a gauge transformation) and treat the IP mode on the same footing as an LO mode, but with a frequency-dependent scalar potential. We assume the TO mode has no interaction.

No fewer than four different scattering sources exist, in general. Two of these are associated with well modes, two with barrier modes. In general, the LO band of frequencies in either material does not span the range between the LO and TO zone-centre frequencies ωLO and ωTO.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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