An efficient finite-difference scheme for computation of electron states in free-standing and core-shell quantum wires
V.V. Arsoski, M. Z. Tadic, N. A. Cukaric, F. M. Peeters

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new finite-difference scheme for accurately computing electron states in quantum wires, improving numerical precision and efficiency over existing methods by combining discretization with a Liouville-like transformation.
Contribution
The authors develop a finite-difference scheme that discretizes the Schrödinger equation and applies a Liouville-like transformation, achieving high accuracy and efficiency comparable to finite element methods.
Findings
The new scheme produces more accurate energy levels than previous FDM methods.
It demonstrates superior efficiency in modeling electron states in quantum wires.
The approach maintains accuracy near the origin and reduces numerical errors.
Abstract
The electron states in axially symmetric quantum wires are computed by means of the effective-mass Schroedinger equation, which is written in cylindrical coordinates phi, rho, and z. We show that a direct discretization of the Schroedinger equation by central finite differences leads to a non-symmetric Hamiltonian matrix. Because diagonalization of such matrices is more complex it is advantageous to transform it in a symmetric form. This can be done by the Liouville-like transformation proposed by Rizea et al. (Comp. Phys. Comm. 179 (2008) 466-478), which replaces the wave function psi(rho) with the function F(rho)=psi(rho)sqrt(rho) and transforms the Hamiltonian accordingly. Even though a symmetric Hamiltonian matrix is produced by this procedure, the computed wave functions are found to be inaccurate near the origin, and the accuracy of the energy levels is not very high. In order to…
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