Janeabc said:
But another problem i have had is density of states in a quantum well. If K-x and K-y are both continual values the the density of states is infinite. I have read this in the
post of yours.
The value of the density of states given in that post is the density of states in momentum-space. Basically you look at a fixed kz and have a look at the energy of the states as a function of kx and ky. You will find that states with equal energy will then lie on the circumference of a circle around kx=ky=0 with kx^2+ky^2=constant. Obviously you can create many of these circles and each will correspond to a different energy. If you go to very large values of kx^2+ky^2 the circle will get rather large and the number of states will tend to infinity as kx^2+ky^2 tends towards infinity. However that situation corresponds to states with large energy. In any realistic setting only states with energy smaller than the confinement potential you have make sense physically. That density of states is obviously always finite.
Also, I would like to stress that the density of states given in that post was the one in momentum space. Typically more interesting is the density of states in energy.
Starting from what is given above, the density of states in k-space can be expressed as
<br />
g(k)dk=2\frac{2\pi\left|k\right|}{V_{2D}}dk<br />
where V2d gives the total volume of momentum space (just (2 pi/L)^2).
To get to the more common representation of density of states in energy space you need to take the typical relation for energy:
<br />
E(k)\frac{\hbar^2 k^2}{2 m}<br />
and solve for k:
<br />
k(E)\frac{\sqrt{2 m E}}{\hbar}.<br />
You also need to replace dk in the density of states by dE:
<br />
\frac{dk(E)}{dE}=\frac{2 m}{2\hbar \sqrt{2 m E}}.<br />
Plugging all that into your equation for the density of states and inserting the volume in k-space, you get:
<br />
g(E) dE=\frac{m}{\pi \hbar^2}dE.<br />
Which is the famous result that the density of states does not depend on the energy for a single quantum well energy level (=single value of kz). As you have several energy levels in a QW, you will then get the famous picture of a constant DOS that increases steplike at several certain energies when a new energy level comes into play due to the next kz coming into play.