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  2. Brus equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brus_equation

    The Brus equation or confinement energy equation can be used to describe the emission energy of quantum dot semiconductor nanocrystals in terms of the band gap energy E gap, the Planck constant h, the radius of the quantum dot r, as well as the effective mass of the excited electron m e * and of the excited hole m h *.

  3. Particle in a ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_in_a_ring

    The case of a particle in a one-dimensional ring is an instructive example when studying the quantization of angular momentum for, say, an electron orbiting the nucleus. The azimuthal wave functions in that case are identical to the energy eigenfunctions of the particle on a ring.

  4. Quantum dot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_dot

    The energy levels of a single particle in a quantum dot can be predicted using the particle in a box model in which the energies of states depend on the length of the box. For an exciton inside a quantum dot, there is also the Coulomb interaction between the negatively charged electron and the positively charged hole.

  5. Electron diffraction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_diffraction

    Close to an aperture or atoms, often called the "sample", the electron wave would be described in terms of near field or Fresnel diffraction. [12]: Chpt 7-8 This has relevance for imaging within electron microscopes, [1]: Chpt 3 [2]: Chpt 3-4 whereas electron diffraction patterns are measured far from the sample, which is described as far-field or Fraunhofer diffraction. [12]:

  6. Particle in a box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_in_a_box

    They display quantum confinement in that the electrons cannot escape the “dot”, thus allowing particle-in-a-box approximations to be used. [23] Their behavior can be described by three-dimensional particle-in-a-box energy quantization equations. [23] The energy gap of a quantum dot is the energy gap between its valence and conduction bands.

  7. Energy level - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_level

    Quantized energy levels result from the wave behavior of particles, which gives a relationship between a particle's energy and its wavelength. For a confined particle such as an electron in an atom, the wave functions that have well defined energies have the form of a standing wave. [3]

  8. Ewald's sphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewald's_sphere

    The energy of the waves (electron, neutron or x-ray) depends upon the magnitude of the wavevector, so if there is no change in energy (elastic scattering) these have the same magnitude, that is they must all lie on the Ewald sphere. In the Figure the red dot is the origin for the wavevectors, the black spots are reciprocal lattice points ...

  9. Particle in a spherically symmetric potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_in_a_spherically...

    Hydrogen atomic orbitals of different energy levels. The more opaque areas are where one is most likely to find an electron at any given time. In quantum mechanics, a spherically symmetric potential is a system of which the potential only depends on the radial distance from the spherical center and a location in space.