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  2. Tight binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tight_binding

    The model gives good qualitative results in many cases and can be combined with other models that give better results where the tight-binding model fails. Though the tight-binding model is a one-electron model, the model also provides a basis for more advanced calculations like the calculation of surface states and application to various kinds ...

  3. Aubry–André model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aubry–André_model

    The Aubry–André model describes a one-dimensional lattice with hopping between nearest-neighbor sites and periodically varying onsite energies. It is a tight-binding (single-band) model with no interactions. The full Hamiltonian can be written as

  4. Peierls substitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peierls_substitution

    Here we give a simple derivation of the Peierls substitution, which is based on The Feynman Lectures (Vol. III, Chapter 21). [3] This derivation postulates that magnetic fields are incorporated in the tight-binding model by adding a phase to the hopping terms and show that it is consistent with the continuum Hamiltonian.

  5. Rashba effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashba_effect

    The Rashba model in solids can be derived in the framework of the k·p perturbation theory [12] or from the point of view of a tight binding approximation. [13] However, the specifics of these methods are considered tedious and many prefer an intuitive toy model that gives qualitatively the same physics (quantitatively it gives a poor ...

  6. Electronic band structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_band_structure

    Each model describes some types of solids very well, and others poorly. The nearly free electron model works well for metals, but poorly for non-metals. The tight binding model is extremely accurate for ionic insulators, such as metal halide salts (e.g. NaCl).

  7. Kitaev chain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitaev_chain

    The tight binding Hamiltonian in of a Kitaev chain considers a one dimensional lattice with N site and spinless particles at zero temperature, subjected to nearest neighbour hoping interactions, given in second quantization formalism as [4]

  8. k·p perturbation theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K·p_perturbation_theory

    The "unperturbed Hamiltonian" is H 0, which in fact equals the exact Hamiltonian at k = 0 (i.e., at the gamma point). The "perturbation" is the term H k ′ {\displaystyle H_{\mathbf {k} }'} . The analysis that results is called k·p perturbation theory, due to the term proportional to k·p .

  9. Kicked rotator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kicked_rotator

    The kicked rotator, also spelled as kicked rotor, is a paradigmatic model for both Hamiltonian chaos (the study of chaos in Hamiltonian systems) and quantum chaos. It describes a free rotating stick (with moment of inertia I {\displaystyle I} ) in an inhomogeneous "gravitation like" field that is periodically switched on in short pulses.