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Adaptive Quantum Design for Nanoscience
Jason Thalken, Stephan Haas, Anthony Levi
University of Southern CaliforniaDepartment of Physics and Astronomy
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Nano-Scale Design• Quantum effects can not be ignored
– Complex interactions require computationally expensive quantum models
– Classical devices will not maintain functionality when scaled into this regime
– New functionalities may exist which have no counterpart at larger length scales
• Broken-symmetry configurations must be examined
– Breaking symmetry often has effects for which we have no a priori intuition
– The desired functionality may result from only a small fraction of the nearly infinite set of all possible configurations
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Adaptive Quantum Design
• A useful device functionality is specified by humans.
• Computers evaluate the functionality of potential designs using an efficient and accurate quantum model.
• Advanced search algorithms find optimal design solutions to best fit the specified functionality.
It is also possible to remove human input entirely, allowing machines to search for solutions which exhibit any useful or “interesting” functionality.
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First Example: Density of States of 4 Atoms in 1D
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EN
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Target DOS:4 equidistant peaks
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Feedback Loop
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Adaptive Quantum Design: 9 Atoms in 2D
• Start with 2D periodic array of atoms.• Use tight-binding description of electrons around atoms.• Break symmetry of 2D atom array to emulate flat density of states.• Local update: guided random walk.
0-5 50
40
80
120(3 × 3) 2D periodic array density of states
Target density of states is quasi-2D
N(E
)
Energy, E/t
Atom position, x Energy, E/t
N(E
)
Ato
m p
ositi
on, y
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Second Example: Excitonic Absorption in AlGaAs Quantum Well Structures
Eg = 1.43 eV
Effective Masses: Electron: 0.067 me, Heavy hole: 0.340 me
F = 0 kV/cm F = 70 kV/cm
Apply anElectric Field
Position, z (nm) Position, z (nm)
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• When an electric field is applied to a symmetric square well, both the absorption peak strength and absorbed photon energy diminishes (quantum confined Stark effect)
Effects of Applied Electric Field on Absorption
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Target: An Absorption Frequency Switch
Specifications: Match absorption strength
at 0 and 70 kV/cm Separate the two peaks
by more than two line widths
Both peaks should have large absorption strength
Abs
orpt
ion
Photon Energy
F = 0 kV/cm
F = 70 kV/cm
•A target function represents the desired quantum physical model output. In this case, the target function is represented by two points of equal absorption strength separated in energy by at least 0.012 eV
•A fitness function represents the weighted distance between the physical model’s output for a particular solution and the target function. The most desirable solution will have the lowest possible fitness value.
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70
700 EEF
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• This solution was discovered using a machine-based genetic algorithm search
• Exponential loss in peak strength intensity as hole ionizes suggests an intensity modulator can be developed from a similar structure
Solution: Field Induced Ionization
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A New Approach to Design:Automated Device Synthesis
• Motivation:– Removing human input from the design process will lift
many time and target related limitations– It is unreasonable to expect humans to perform an
exhaustive search of n-dimensional configuration space
Solutions
ComputerSorting
InterestingSolutions
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Computer-Sorted “Interesting” Absorption Paths
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Conclusions• Adaptive Quantum Design: search for optimum
system configurations which closely match target functions, which leads to the discovery of new molecular building blocks.
• New paradigm for nanoscience: target dictates system shape.
• Removing the target: machines that search for optimal configurations can perform exploratory searches for “interesting” solutions as well