introduction to the tightbinding (lcao) method

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Introduction to the Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

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Introduction to the Tightbinding (LCAO) Method. Tightbinding: 1 Dimensional Model #1. Consider an Infinite Linear Chain of identical atoms, with 1 s-orbital valence e - per atom & interatomic spacing = a - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

Introductionto the

Tightbinding (LCAO)Method

Page 2: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

Tightbinding: 1 Dimensional Model #1• Consider an Infinite Linear Chain of identical atoms, with 1

s-orbital valence e- per atom & interatomic spacing = a• Approximation: Only Nearest-Neighbor interactions.

(Interactions between atoms further apart than a are ~ 0).

This model is called the “Monatomic Chain”.

Each atom has s electron orbitals only!Near-neighbor interaction only means that thes orbital on site

n interacts with the s orbitals on sites n – 1 & n + 1 only!

n = Atomic Label a

n = -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4

Page 3: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• The periodic potential V(x) for this Monatomic Linear Chain of atoms looks qualitatively like this:

n = -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3

a

V(x) = V(x + a)

Page 4: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• The localized atomic orbitals on each site for this Monatomic Linear Chain of atoms look qualitatively like this:

n = -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3

The spherically symmetric s orbitals on each site overlap slightly with those of their neighbors, as shown. This allows the electron on site n to interact with its nearest-neighbors on sites n – 1 & n + 1!

a

Page 5: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

The True Hamiltonian in the solid is:H = (p)2/(2mo) + V(x), with V(x) = V(x + a).

• Instead, approximate it as H ∑n Hat(n) + ∑n,nU(n,n)

where, Hat(n) Atomic Hamiltonian for atom n.

U(n,n) Interaction Energy between atoms n & n.Use the assumption of only nearest-neighbor interactions:

U(n,n) = 0 unless n = n -1 or n = n +1

• With this assumption, the Approximate Hamiltonian is

H ∑n [Hat(n) + U(n,n -1) + U(n,n + 1)]

Page 6: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

H ∑n [Hat(n) + U(n,n -1) + U(n,n + 1)] • Goal: Calculate the bandstructure Ek by solving the

Schrödinger Equation:HΨk(x) = Ek Ψk(x)

• Use the LCAO (Tightbinding) Assumptions: 1. H is as above. 2. Solutions to the atomic Schrödinger Equation are known:

Hat(n)ψn(x) = Enψn(x) 3. In our simple case of 1 s-orbital/atom:

En= ε = the energy of the atomic e- (known) 4. ψn(x) is very localized around atom n

5. The Crucial (LCAO) assumption is:Ψk(x) ∑neiknaψn(x)

That is, the Bloch Functions are linear combinations of atomic orbitals!

Page 7: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Dirac notation: Ek Ψk|H|Ψk(This Matrix Element is shorthand for a spatial integral!)

• Using the assumptions for H & Ψk(x) already listed:

Ek = Ψk|∑n Hat(n) |Ψk + Ψk|[∑nU(n,n-1) + U(n,n-1)]|Ψk

also note that Hat(n)|ψn = ε|ψn

• The LCAO assumption is: |Ψk ∑neikna|ψn

• Assume orthogonality of the atomic orbitals:

ψn |ψn = δn,n (= 1, n = n; = 0, n n)

• Nearest-neighbor interaction assumption:

There is nearest-neighbor overlap energy only! (α = constant)

ψn|U(n,n 1)|ψn - α; (n = n, & n = n

1)

ψn|U(n,n 1)|ψn = 0, otherwise It can be shown that for α > 0,

this must be negative!

Page 8: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• As a student exercise, show that the “energy band” of this model is:

Ek= ε - 2αcos(ka) or Ek = ε - 2α + 4α sin2[(½)ka]

• A trig identity was used to get last form. ε & α are usually taken as parameters in the theory, instead of actually calculating them from the atomic ψn

The “Bandstructure” for this monatomic chain with nearest-neighbor interactions only looks like (assuming 2α < ε ): (ET Ek - ε + 2α)

It’s interesting to note that:The form Ek= ε - 2αcos(ka) is similar to Krönig-Penney model results in the linear approximation for the messy transcendental function! There, we got:

Ek = A - Bcos(ka) where A & B were constants.

ET

Page 9: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

n = -1 0 1

Tightbinding: 1 Dimensional Model #2 A 1-dimensional “semiconductor”!

• Consider an Infinite Linear Chain consisting of 2 atom types, A & B (a crystal with 2-atom unit cells), 1 s-orbital valence e- per atom & unit cell repeat distance = a.

• Approximation: Only Nearest-Neighbor interactions. (Interactions between atoms further apart than ~ (½ )a are ~ 0).

This model is called the “Diatomic Chain”.

A B A B A B A

a

Page 10: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

The True Hamiltonian in the solid is:

H = (p)2/(2mo) + V(x), with V(x) = V(x + a).• Instead, approximate it (with γ = A or =B) as

H ∑γnHat(γ,n) + ∑γn,γnU(γ,n;γ,n)where, Hat(γ,n) Atomic Hamiltonian for atom γ in cell n.

U(γ,n;γ,n) Interaction Energy between atom of type γ

in cell n & atom of type γ in cell n.Use the assumption of only nearest-neighbor interactions:

The only non-zero U(γ,n;γ,n) are U(A,n;B,n-1) = U(B,n;A,n+1) U(n,n-1) U(n,n+1)

• With this assumption, the Approximate Hamiltonian is:

H ∑γnHat(γ,n) + ∑n[U(n,n -1) + U(n,n + 1)]

Page 11: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

H ∑γnHat(γ,n) + ∑n[U(n,n -1) + U(n,n + 1)] • Goal: Calculate the bandstructure Ek by solving the Schrödinger Equation:

HΨk(x) = EkΨk(x)• Use the LCAO (Tightbinding) Assumptions:

1. H is as above. 2. Solutions to the atomic Schrödinger Equation are known:

Hat(γ,n)ψγn(x) = Eγnψγn(x) 3. In our simple case of 1 s-orbital/atom:

EAn= εA = the energy of the atomic e- on atom AEBn= εB = the energy of the atomic e- on atom B

4. ψγn(x) is very localized near cell n

5. The Crucial (LCAO) assumption is: Ψk(x) ∑neikna∑γCγψγn(x)

That is, the Bloch Functions are linear combinations of atomic orbitals!

Note!! The Cγ’s are unknown

Page 12: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Dirac Notation: Schrödinger Equation: Ek Ψk|H|Ψk

ψAn|H|Ψk = EkψAn|H|Ψk (1)• Manipulation of (1), using LCAO assumptions, gives (student

exercise):

εAeiknaCA+ μ[eik(n-1)a + eik(n+1)a]CB = EkeiknaCA (1a)

• Similarly: ψBn|H|Ψk = EkψBn|H|Ψk (2) • Manipulation of (2), using LCAO assumptions, gives (student exercise):

εBeiknaCB+ μ[eik(n-1)a + eik(n+1)a]CA = EkeiknaCA (2a)

Here, μ ψAn|U(n,n-1)|ψB,n-1 ψBn|U(n,n+1)|ψA,n+1

= constant (nearest-neighbor overlap energy) analogous to α in the previous 1d model

Page 13: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Student exercise to show that these simplify to:

0 = (εA - Ek)CA + 2μcos(ka)CB , (3)

and

0 = 2μcos(ka)CA + (εB - Ek)CB, (4)

• εA, εB , μ are usually taken as parameters in the theory, instead of computing them from the atomic ψγn

• (3) & (4) are linear, homogeneous algebraic equations for CA & CB

22 determinant of coefficients = 0

• This gives: (εA - Ek)(εB - Ek) - 4 μ2[cos(ka)]2 = 0

A quadratic equation for Ek!

2 solutions: a “valence” band

& a “conduction” band!

Page 14: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Results:

“Bandstructure” of the Diatomic Linear Chain (2 bands):

E(k) = (½)(εA + εB) [(¼)(εA - εB)2 + 4μ2 {cos(ka)}2]

• This gives a k = 0 bandgap of

EG= E+(0) - E-(0) = 2[(¼)(εA - εB)2 + 4μ2]½

• For simplicity, plot in the case

4μ2 << (¼)(εA - εB)2 & εB > εA

Expand the [ ….]½ part of E(k) & keep the lowest order term

E+(k) εB + A[cos(ka)]2, E-(k) εA - A[cos(ka)]2

EG(0) εA – εB + 2A , where A (4μ2)/|εA - εB|

Page 15: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

“Bandstructure” of a 1-dimensional “semiconductor”:

Page 16: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

Tightbinding Method: 3 Dimensional Model

• Model: Consider a monatomic solid, 3d, with only nearest-neighbor interactions. Hamiltonian:

H = (p)2/(2mo) + V(r)

V(r) = crystal potential,

with the full lattice symmetry & periodicity.• Assume (R,R = lattice sites):

H ∑RHat(R) + ∑R,RU(R,R)Hat(R) Atomic Hamiltonian for atom at R

U(R,R) Interaction Potential between atoms at R & R

Near-neighbor interactions only!

U(R,R) = 0 unless R & R are nearest-neighbors

Page 17: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Goal: Calculate the bandstructure Ek by solving the Schrödinger Equation:

HΨk(r) = EkΨk(r)• Use the LCAO (Tightbinding) Assumptions:

1. H is as on previous page. 2. Solutions to the atomic Schrödinger Equation are known:

Hat(R)ψn(R) = Enψn(R), n = Orbital Label (s, p, d,..),

En= Atomic energy of the e- in orbital n

3. ψn(R) is very localized around R

4. The Crucial (LCAO) assumption is:

Ψk(r) = ∑ReikR∑nbnψn(r-R) (bn to be determined)

ψn(R): The atomic functions are orthogonal for different n & R

That is, the Bloch Functions are linear combinations of

atomic orbitals!

Page 18: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Dirac Notation: Solve the Schrödinger Equation: Ek Ψk|H|Ψk

The LCAO assumption:

|Ψk = ∑ReikR ∑nbn|ψn (1)

(bn to be determined)

• Consider a particular orbital with label m:

ψm|H|Ψk = Ekψm|H|Ψk (2)• Use (1) in (2).• Then use

1. The orthogonality of the atomic orbitals2. The assumed form of H3. The fact that ψn(R) is very localized around R4. That we know the atomic solutions to Hat|ψn = En|ψn5. The nearest neighbor assumption that U(R,R) = 0

unless R & R are nearest-neighors.

Page 19: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Manipulate (several pages of algebra) to get:

(Ek - Em)bm + ∑n∑R0 eikR γmn(R)bn = 0 , (I)

where: γmn(R) ψm|U(0,R)|ψn “Overlap Energy Integral”

• The γmn(R) are analogous to the α & μ in the 1d models. They are similar to Vssσ, etc. in real materials, discussed next! The integrals are horrendous to do for real atomic ψm! In practice, they are treated as parameters to fit to experimental data.

• Equation (I): Is a system of N homogeneous, linear, algebraic equations for the coefficients bn. N = number of atomic orbitals.

• Equation (I) for N atomic states

The solution is obtained by taking an N N determinant!

This results in N bands which have their roots in the atomic orbitals!

• If the γmn(R) are “small”, each band can be thought of as

Ek ~ En + k dependent corrections

That is, the bands are ~ atomic levels + corrections

Page 20: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Equation (I): A system of homogeneous, linear, algebraic equations for the bn

• N atomic states Solve an N N determinant!N bands

Note: We’ve implicitly assumed 1 atom/unit cell.If there are n atoms/unit cell, we get nN equations & nN bands!

• Artificial Special Case #1: One s level per atom 1 (s-like) band

• Artificial Special Case #2: Three p levels per atom 3 (p-like) bands

• Artificial Special Case #3:One s and three p levels per atom & sp3 bonding

4 bands NOTE that

For n atoms /unit cell, multiply by n to get the number of bands!

Page 21: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

• Back to:

(Ek - Em)bm + ∑n∑R0 eikR γmn(R)bn = 0 , (I)

where: γmn(R) ψm|U(0,R)|ψn

“Overlap Energy Integral”• Also: Assume nearest neighbor interactions only

∑R0 is ONLY over nearest neighbors!• Artificial Special Case #1: One s level per atom

1 (s-like) band: Ek = Es - ∑R=nneikR γ(R)

But γ(R) = γ is the same for all neighbors so:

Ek = Es - γ∑R=nneikR

• Assume, for example, a simple cubic lattice:

Ek = Es -2γ[cos(kxa) + cos(kya) +cos(kza)]

Page 22: Introduction to the  Tightbinding (LCAO) Method

Artificial Special Case #2:Three p levels per atom.

Gives a 3 3 determinant to solve. 3 (p-like) bands

Student exercise!!

Artificial Special Case #3:One s and three p levels per atom & sp3 bonding

Gives a 3 3 determinant to solve.

4 bands Student exercise!!