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Confined polar optical phonons are studied in a semiconductor double heterostructure (SDH) by means of a generalization of a theory developed some years ago and based on a continuous medium model. The treatment considers the coupling of electro-mechanical oscillations and involves dispersive phonons. This approach has provided results beyond the usually applied dielectric continuum models, where just the electric aspect of the oscillations is analyzed. In the previous works on the subject the theory included phonon dispersion within a quadratic (parabolic) approximation, while presently linear contributions were added by a straightforward extension of the fundamental equations. The generalized version of the mentioned theoretical treatment leads to a description of long wavelength polar optical phonons showing a closer agreement with experimental data and with calculations along atomistic models. This is particularly important for systems where the linear contribution to dispersion becomes predominant. We present a systematic derivation of the underlying equations, their solutions for the bulk and SDH cases, providing us a complete description of the dispersive modes and the associated electron-phonon Hamiltonian. The results obtained are applied to the case of a EuS/PbS/EuS quantum-well.
We analyze the band topology of acoustic phonons in 2D materials by considering the interplay of spatial and internal symmetries with additional constraints that arise from the physical context. These supplemental constraints trace back to the Nambu-
Confined optical phonons are discussed for a semiconductor nanowire of the Ge (Si)prototype on the basis of a theory developed some years ago. In the present work this theory is adapted to a non polar material and generalized to the case when the pho
The coupling between spin, charge, and lattice degrees of freedom plays an important role in a wide range of fundamental phenomena. Monolayer semiconducting transitional metal dichalcogenides have emerged as an outstanding platform for studying these
A topological superconductor features at its boundaries and vortices Majorana fermions, which are potentially applicable for topological quantum computations. The scarcity of the known experimentally verified physical systems with topological superco
We generalize the notion of dissipationless, topological Hall viscosity tensor to optical phonons in thin film Weyl semimetals. By using the strained Porphyrin thin film Weyl semimetal as a model example, we show how optical phonons can couple to Wey