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Physics 725: Assignment 1: (To Be Submitted by Tuesday, September 20, 2016)

The document discusses crystal lattices and periodic structures. It examines two crystal structures and determines their lattice vectors, unit cell areas, basis sets, and symmetries. It also analyzes a one-dimensional crystal formed from an alternating molecular rope and determines its reciprocal lattice, periodicity, and a single electron wavefunction within the structure.

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Tuba Sarwar
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
123 views

Physics 725: Assignment 1: (To Be Submitted by Tuesday, September 20, 2016)

The document discusses crystal lattices and periodic structures. It examines two crystal structures and determines their lattice vectors, unit cell areas, basis sets, and symmetries. It also analyzes a one-dimensional crystal formed from an alternating molecular rope and determines its reciprocal lattice, periodicity, and a single electron wavefunction within the structure.

Uploaded by

Tuba Sarwar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Physics 725: Assignment 1

(to be submitted by Tuesday, September 20, 2016)

1. Consider the two-dimensional crystals labelled I and II.

(I) (II)

Answer each of the following questions for both the type-I and type-II cases.

(a) Provide a set of lattice vectors {a 1, a2 } that describes the Bravais lattice. Hint: Start from a particular
atom and find the two shortest, non-collinear vectors that connect the atom to two equivalent ones in
adjacent unit cells; equivalent here means the same atom in the same local environment.
Crystal I. a 1 = 2ae x , a2 = ae y . Crystal II. a 1 = a(e x + e y ), a 2 = a(e x − e y ).
(b) Introduce a dummy lattice vector a 3 = e z , directed out of the plane of the crystal, and compute the
area of the unit cell Ω0 = (a 1 × a 2 ) ⋅ a 3 .
2 2
Crystal I. Ω0 = (2ae x × ae y ) ⋅ e z = 2a . Crystal II. Ω0 = a(e x + e y ) × a(e x − e y ) ⋅ e z = 2a .
(c) Construct a basis {τ} for the atoms in each unit cell.
This basis works for both Crystals I and II.

τ●,1 = 0 τ,1 = (a/2)e y τ⭑ = (a/2)e x


τ●,2 = ae x τ,2 = ae x + (a/2)e y τ⭐ = (3/2)a x

(d) Determine the corresponding reciprocal lattice vectors and identify the Brillouin zone (BZ) using
the Wigner-Seitz construction.
2π 2π π
Crystal I: g1 = a × e z = 2 ae y × e z = − a e x
Ω0 2 2a
2π 2π 2π
g2 = e z × a 1 = 2 e z × 2ae x = a e y
Ω0 2a
2π 2π π
Crystal II: g1 = a 2 × e z = 2 a(e x − e y ) × e z = a (−e x − e y )
Ω0 2a
2π 2π π
g2 = e × a 1 = 2 e z × a(e x + e y ) = a (−e x + e y )
Ω0 z 2a
(e) Indicate which of the following is a symmetry of Crystal I/II:
– translation by ae x no/no
– translation by ae y yes/no
– inversion through a point coinciding with a filled square no/yes
– rotation by π/2 through a point coinciding with a filled circle no/no
– rotation by π through a point coinciding with a filled circle no/no
– mirror reflection across a line running vertically through stars only yes/yes
– mirror reflection across a line running diagonally through circles only no/no
– translation by ae x followed by a mirror reflection across a line running horizontally through
squares only (an example of a glide) no/yes

2. Imagine a molecular rope made up of an alternating sequence of atoms A and B, where the AB bonding
length is a constant value a.

(a) Sketch this system and explain why it should be viewed as a crystal.
The system consists of repeated unit cells of length 2a containing on A atom and one B atom:
⋯A—B—A—B—A—B—A—B—A⋯
ÍÒÒ Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò ÑÒÒ Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò ÏÍÒÒ Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò ÑÒÒ Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ï
2a 2a
(b) The atomic positions are given by RA = R + τA = 2na, and RB = R + τB = (2n + 1)a, where n is
an integer. Provide definitions of the lattice vectors and basis.
There is a single lattice vector a1 = 2a and two basis vectors τA = 0 and τB = a.
(c) Give a definition for the reciprocal lattice {G} and show that it is indeed reciprocal to the Bravais
lattice {R}. The best way to do this is to prove that exp(iGR) = 1 for all possible choices of G and
R.
The Bravais lattice and reciprocal lattice are {R} = a1 Z = 2aZ and {G} = g1 Z = (π/a)Z. Every
choice for G and R satisfies exp(iGR) = exp[i(2a × m)(π/a × n)] = exp(2πi × mn) = 1 for
particular integers m and n.
(d) In the ground state, any physical properties of the system will share the periodicity of the lattice and
admit an expansion
iGr
f (r) = ∑ f G e .
G

Show that f (r + R) = f (r) for any R in the Bravais lattice.

iG(r+R) iGr iGR iGr


f (r + R) = ∑ f G e = ∑ fGe e = ∑ fGe = f (r)
ÍÒÒ Ò Ò ÑÒ Ò Ò Ò Ï
G G =1 G

(e) What condition on the coefficients f G ensures that f (r) is real?



iGr ∗ −iGr inversion G → −G iGr
f (r) = (∑ f G e ) = ∑ fGe
∗ ∗
−−−−−−−−−−−→ ∑ f −G e
G G G

ensures that f (r) = f (r) .


∗ ∗
Hence f G = f −G
(f) Consider a single electron living along the molecular rope. Argue that the most general form of its
wave function is
i[Gr+θ(r)]
ψ(r) = ∑ f G e .
G
All physical quantities in the crystalline environment must share the periodicity of the underlying
2
Bravais lattice. This implies that the electron density ∣ψ(r)∣ is perdiodic. The probability amplitude
iθ(r)
ψ(r), on the other hand, is periodic up to an arbitrary phase e , which can be different at each
point in space.
(g) Show that
1 2a 2 2
∫ dr ∣ψ(r)∣ = ∑ ∣ f G ∣ .
2a 0
G

1 2a ∗ ∗ −i[Gr+θ(r)]

i[G r+θ(r)]
∫ dr ψ(r) ψ(r) = ∑ f G e ⋅ ∑ f G′ e
2a 0
G ′ G
2a
∗ 1 i(G −G)r

= ∑ f G f G′ ∫ dr e
2a 0
G,G ′ ÍÒÒ Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò ÑÒ Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ò Ï
δG, G ′
2
= ∑∣ f G ∣
G

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