Feynman-Haken path-integral approach for polarons in parabolic quantum wires and dots

Citation
Qh. Chen et al., Feynman-Haken path-integral approach for polarons in parabolic quantum wires and dots, PHYS REV B, 58(24), 1998, pp. 16340-16352
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
Apllied Physucs/Condensed Matter/Materiales Science
Journal title
PHYSICAL REVIEW B-CONDENSED MATTER
ISSN journal
01631829 → ACNP
Volume
58
Issue
24
Year of publication
1998
Pages
16340 - 16352
Database
ISI
SICI code
0163-1829(199812)58:24<16340:FPAFPI>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Within the framework of the Feynman-Haken (FH) variational path-integral th eory, the expression for the ground-state energy of the electron and longit udinal-optical phonon system in parabolic quantum wires and dots with arbit rary electron-phonon coupling constant and confining potential strength is derived in a unified way with the use of a general effective potential. For quantum dots, due to high symmetry, a simple closed-form analytical expres sion for the Feynman energy can be obtained, and the analytical results in the extended-state and localized-state limit can be further derived. It is shown both analytically and numerically that the present FH results could b e better than those obtained by the second-order Rayleigh-Schordinger pertu rbation theory and the Landau-Pekar strong-coupling theory for all cases, w hich, therefore, shows the effectiveness of the present approach. In quantu m wires, it is found in numerical calculations that the binding of polarons is monotonically stronger as the effective wire radius in the whole coupli ng regime. Interestingly, when the confining potential of quantum wire is e xtremely strengthened, even in the weak- and intermediate-coupling regime, this system could exhibit some strong-coupling features. More importantly, it is proven strictly that a very recent result in the literature that ''th e binding can be weaker than in bulk case at weak coupling" is not an intri nsic property of this system. In quantum dots, it is found numerically that the polaron binding energy increases with the decrease in size of the dot and is much more pronounced in two dimensions (2D) than in 3D, while the re lative polaronic enhancement is stronger in 3D than in 2D for not too weak electron-phonon coupling. [S0163-1829(98)01544-6].