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<art><ui>1556-276X-3-140</ui><ji>1556-276X</ji><fm><dochead>Nano Express</dochead><bibl><title><p>A Model System for Dimensional Competition in Nanostructures: A Quantum Wire on a Surface</p></title><aug><au ca="yes" id="A1"><snm>Dick</snm><fnm>Rainer</fnm><insr iid="I1"/><email>rainer.dick@usask.ca</email></au></aug><insg><ins id="I1"><p>Physics and Engineering Physics, University of Saskatchewan, 116 Science Place, Saskatoon, SK, Canada, S7N 5E2</p></ins></insg><source>Nanoscale Research Letters</source><publisher>Springer-Verlag, New York</publisher><issn>1556-276X</issn><pubdate>2008</pubdate><volume>3</volume><issue>4</issue><fpage>140</fpage><lpage>144</lpage><xrefbib><pubid idtype="doi">10.1007/s11671-008-9126-4</pubid></xrefbib></bibl><history><rec><date><day>16</day><month>1</month><year>2008</year></date></rec><acc><date><day>13</day><month>3</month><year>2008</year></date></acc><pub><date><day>2</day><month>4</month><year>2008</year></date></pub></history><cpyrt><year>2008</year><collab>to the authors</collab></cpyrt><kwdg><kwd>Fermions in reduced dimensions</kwd><kwd>Nanowires</kwd><kwd>Quantum wires</kwd></kwdg><abs><sec><st><p>Abstract</p></st><p>The retarded Green&#8217;s function (<it>E</it>&#8722;<it>H</it> + i&#949;)<sup>&#8722;1</sup>is given for a dimensionally hybrid Hamiltonian which interpolates between one and two dimensions. This is used as a model for dimensional competition in propagation effects in the presence of one-dimensional subsystems on a surface. The presence of a quantum wire generates additional exponential terms in the Green&#8217;s function. The result shows how the location of the one-dimensional subsystem affects propagation of particles.</p></sec></abs></fm><meta><classifications><classification subtype="Primary" type="springerjournalsubject">Chemistry</classification><classification subtype="Secondary" type="springerjournalsubject">Engineering, general</classification><classification subtype="Secondary" type="springerjournalsubject">Physics, general</classification><classification subtype="Secondary" type="springerjournalsubject">Chemistry/Food Science, general</classification><classification subtype="Secondary" type="springerjournalsubject">Materials Science</classification><classification subtype="Secondary" type="springerjournalsubject">Nanotechnology</classification></classifications></meta><bdy><sec><st><p>Introduction</p></st><p>One-dimensional field theory is frequently used for quantum wires or nanowires <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B1">1</abbr><abbr bid="B2">2</abbr><abbr bid="B3">3</abbr></abbrgrp> or nanotubes <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B4">4</abbr><abbr bid="B5">5</abbr><abbr bid="B6">6</abbr><abbr bid="B7">7</abbr></abbrgrp>. Two-dimensional field theory has become a universally accepted tool for the theoretical modeling of particles and quasi-particles on surfaces, interfaces, and thin films. The success of low-dimensional field theory in applications to the quantum hall effects <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B8">8</abbr><abbr bid="B9">9</abbr><abbr bid="B10">10</abbr></abbrgrp>, impurity scattering in low-dimensional system (see e.g. <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B11">11</abbr><abbr bid="B12">12</abbr><abbr bid="B13">13</abbr><abbr bid="B14">14</abbr><abbr bid="B15">15</abbr><abbr bid="B16">16</abbr></abbrgrp>), and the confirmation of low-dimensional critical exponents in experimental samples <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B17">17</abbr><abbr bid="B18">18</abbr><abbr bid="B19">19</abbr><abbr bid="B20">20</abbr><abbr bid="B21">21</abbr><abbr bid="B22">22</abbr></abbrgrp> confirm that low-dimensional field theories are useful tools for the description of low-dimensional condensed matter systems.</p><p>The properties of a physical system have a strong dependence on the number of dimensions<it>d</it>. A straightforward example is provided by the zero energy Green&#8217;s function<it>G</it>(<it>r</it>)|<sub><it>E</it>=0</sub>, which is proportional to<it>r</it>in<it>d</it> = 1 and proportional to ln<it>r</it>in<it>d</it> = 2, and decays like<it>r</it><sup>2 &#8722; <it>d</it></sup>in higher dimensions. Green&#8217;s functions determine correlation functions, two-particle interaction potentials, propagation of initial conditions, scattering off perturbations, susceptibilities, and densities of states in quantum physics. It is therefore of interest to study systems of mixed dimensionality, where competition of dimensions can manifest itself in the properties of particle propagators.</p><p>To address questions of dimensional competition analytically in the framework of interfaces in a bulk material, dimensionally hybrid Hamiltonians of the form
</p>
<p><display-formula id="M1"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i1.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>were introduced in <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B23">23</abbr></abbrgrp>. The corresponding first quantized Hamiltonian is
</p>
<p><display-formula id="M2"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i2.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>Here the convention is to use vector notation <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i3.gif"/></inline-formula> for directions parallel to an interface, while <it>z</it> is orthogonal to the interface. From a practical side, Hamiltonians of the form (2) may be used to investigate propagation effects of weakly coupled particles in the presence of an interface. From a theoretical side, the Hamiltonians (1,2) are of interest for the analytic study of competition between two-dimensional and three-dimensional motion.</p><p>The two-dimensional mass parameter &#956; is a mass per length. In simple models it is given by</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i4.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>where depending on the model, <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i5.gif"/></inline-formula> is either a bulk penetration depth of states bound to the interface at <it>z</it> = <it>z</it><sub>0</sub> or a thickness of the interface, see <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B24">24</abbr></abbrgrp>.</p><p>The zero energy Green&#8217;s function for the Hamiltonians (1,2) for perturbations in the interface (<it>z</it>&#8242; = <it>z</it><sub>0</sub> = 0, <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i6.gif"/></inline-formula>) satisfies</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i7.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>and was found in <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B23">23</abbr></abbrgrp> (<inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i8.gif"/></inline-formula>),</p>
<p><display-formula id="M3"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i9.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The Green&#8217;s function in the interface is given in terms of a Struve function and a Bessel function,</p>
<p><display-formula id="M4"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i10.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>and interpolates between two-dimensional and three-dimensional distance laws (see Fig. <figr fid="F1">1</figr>),</p>
<p><display-formula id="M5"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i11.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p><display-formula id="M6"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i12.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<fig id="F1"><title><p>Figure 1</p></title><text>
   <p>The upper dotted line is the three-dimensional Green's function (4&#960;<it>r</it>) <sup>&#8722;1</sup> in units of &#8467;<sup>&#8722;1</sup>, the continuous line is the Green's function (4), and the lower dotted line is the two-dimensional logarithmic Green&#8217;s function. <it>x</it> = <it>r</it>/&#8467;</p>
</text><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-1"/></fig>
<p>The corresponding energy-dependent Green&#8217;s function was also recently reported <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B24">24</abbr></abbrgrp>. However, another system of great practical and theoretical interest concerns quantum wires or nanowires on surfaces. Preparation techniques for one-dimensional nanostructures were recently reviewed in reference <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B25">25</abbr></abbrgrp>. We will examine the corresponding dimensionally hybrid Hamiltonian and its Green&#8217;s function in this paper.</p></sec><sec><st><p>The Hamiltonian</p></st><p>We wish to discuss effects of dimensionality of nanostructures on the propagation of weakly coupled particles in the framework of a simple model system. We assume large de Broglie wavelengths <it>h</it>/<it>p</it> compared to lateral dimensions of nanostructures, and for our model system we also neglect electromagnetic effects or interactions, bearing in mind that these effects are highly relevant in realistic nanostructures <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B26">26</abbr><abbr bid="B27">27</abbr></abbrgrp>.</p><p>The model system which we have in mind consists of non-relativistic particles or quasi-particles tied to a surface. The surface carries a one-dimensional wire. The <it>x</it> direction is along the wire and the <it>y</it> direction is orthogonal to the wire. The wire is located at <it>y</it> = <it>y</it><sub>0</sub>. The particles can move with a mass <it>m</it> on the surface, but motion along the wire may be described by a different effective mass <it>m</it><sub>*</sub>. In case of a weak attraction to substructures, kinetic operators can be split between bulk motion and motion along substructures <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B24">24</abbr></abbrgrp>. Alternatively, for large lateral de Broglie wavelength relative to lateral extension <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i13.gif"/></inline-formula> of a substructure, one can also argue that the lateral integral of the kinetic energy density along a substructure only yields a factor <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i14.gif"/></inline-formula> in the kinetic energy for motion along the substructure. In either case we end up with an approximation for the kinetic energy operator of the particles of the form</p>
<p><display-formula id="M7"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i15.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>where the mass parameter <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i16.gif"/></inline-formula> is a mass per lateral attenuation length of bound states, or a mass per lateral extension of the substructure. The operator (7) is the second quantized kinetic Hamiltonian for the particles. The corresponding first quantized Hamiltonian is</p>
<p><display-formula id="M8"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i17.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The wire corresponds to a channel in which propagation of a particle comes with a different cost in terms of kinetic energy. It is intuitively clear that existence of this channel will affect propagation of the particles on the surface, and we will discuss this in terms of a resulting Green&#8217;s function for the Hamiltonians (7,8).</p></sec><sec><st><p>The Green&#8217;s Function in<it>k</it>Space</p></st><p>The Hamiltonians (7,8) yield the Schr&#246;dinger equation</p>
<p><display-formula id="M9"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i18.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>and the corresponding equation for the Green&#8217;s function in the energy representation,</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i19.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The last equation reads in (<it>x</it>,<it>y</it>) representation and with the convention <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i20.gif"/></inline-formula></p>
<p><display-formula id="M10"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i21.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>Substitution of the Fourier transform</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i22.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>yields</p>
<p><display-formula id="M11"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i23.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>This yields with</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i24.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>the condition</p>
<p><display-formula id="M12"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i25.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>This result implies that <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i26.gif"/></inline-formula> must have the form</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i27.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>with the yet to be determined function <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i28.gif"/></inline-formula> satisfying</p>
<p><display-formula id="M13"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i29.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>Substitution of</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i30.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>yields</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i31.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>We finally find</p>
<p><display-formula id="M14"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i32.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>where the definition</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i33.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>was used. <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i34.gif"/></inline-formula>) is the Green&#8217;s function which we would use in<it>k</it>space Feynman rules. It is also instructive to switch to<it>y</it>representation for the transverse direction to see the impact of the wire on particle propagation.</p></sec><sec><st><p>The Green&#8217;s Function in Mixed Representations and Impurity Scattering</p></st><p>It is well known in surface science that Green&#8217;s functions can also be given in closed form in mixed representations, where momentum coordinates are used along the surface and configuration space coordinates are used for the transverse directions. The same observation applies here. In particular, the Green&#8217;s function with one transverse momentum replaced by a transverse coordinate is given by</p>
<p><display-formula id="M15"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i35.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The Green&#8217;s function with both arguments for the transverse direction given in terms of configuration space coordinates is</p>
<p><display-formula id="M16"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i36.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The first order perturbation of a state &#968;<sub>0</sub>(<it>x</it>,<it>y</it>) due to scattering off an impurity potential <it>V</it>(<it>x</it>,<it>y</it>) corresponds to</p>
<p><display-formula id="M17"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i37.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The result (16) shows peculiar distance effects between the location of the wire and the perturbation or impurity on the one hand, and between the location of the wire and the<it>y</it>coordinate of the wave function on the other hand. In both cases, the wavelength (for <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i38.gif"/></inline-formula>) or attenuation length (for <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i39.gif"/></inline-formula>) are the same as in the terms from the unperturbed surface propagator. In the evanescent case, the impact of the wire on impurity scattering is exponentially suppressed if either the impurity is located far from the wire or if the wave function is considered far from the wire. In the non-evanescent case the perturbation of the propagator due to the wire becomes a strongly oscillating function of <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i40.gif"/></inline-formula> far from the wire. Therefore the impact of the wire will also be small if we consider wave packets far from the wire.</p><p>For a simple application of (17) consider a wire at <it>y</it><sub>0</sub> = 0 and an impurity potential</p>
<p><display-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i41.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The plane wave <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i42.gif"/></inline-formula> with <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i43.gif"/></inline-formula> is a solution of the Schr&#246;dinger Eq. 9 which satisfies the conditions for the approximation (7). In this case we get a scattering amplitude</p>
<p><display-formula id="M18"><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i44.gif"/></display-formula></p>
<p>The equation for &#8467; = 0 is just the standard result for scattering from a pointlike impurity in mixed representation. The presence of the wire reduces the scattering cross section of the impurity for orthogonal infall.</p><p>Equations 15 and 16 also show that the effects of the additional terms should be most noticeable if<it>k</it><sub><it>x</it></sub>&#8467; &#8811; 1. Since <inline-formula><graphic file="1556-276X-3-140-i45.gif"/></inline-formula> promising samples should have an effective mass <it>m</it><sub>*</sub> for motion along a quantum or nanowire which is much smaller than the effective mass <it>m</it> for motion along the surface. What comes to mind is an InSb nanowire on a Si surface. Scattering of surface particles off impurities in the presence of the wire should exhibit the additional propagator terms.</p></sec><sec><st><p>Conclusion</p></st><p>A simple model system for dimensional competition in nanostructures has been proposed. The system assumes that motion along a wire on a surface comes with a different cost in terms of kinetic energy, e.g. due to effective mass effects. The dimensionally hybrid retarded Green&#8217;s function for the propagation of free particles in the system was found in closed analytic form both in<it>k</it>space and in mixed (<it>k</it><sub><it>x</it></sub>,<it>y</it>) representations. The wire generates extra exponential terms in the propagator of the particles. The attenuation lengths or wavelengths in the evanescent or oscillating case, respectively, are the same as for the unperturbed propagator, but the extra terms exhibit distance effects between the particles and the wire.</p></sec></bdy><bm><ack><sec><st><p>Acknowledgments</p></st><p>This work was supported in part by NSERC Canada. 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