Abstract
Many-body effects on conduction and diffusion of electrons and holes in a semiconductor quantum well are studied using a microscopic theory. The roles played by the screened Hartree-Fock (SHF) terms and the scattering terms are examined. It is found that the electron and hole conductivities depend only on the scattering terms, while the two-component electron-hole diffusion coefficients depend on both the SHF part and the scattering part. We show that, in the limit of the ambipolar diffusion approximation, however, the diffusion coefficients for carrier density and temperature are independent of electron-hole scattering. In particular, we found that the SHF terms lead to a reduction of density-diffusion coefficients and an increase in temperature-diffusion coefficients. Such a reduction or increase is explained in terms of a density- and temperature-dependent energy landscape created by the band-gap renormalization.
- Received 28 December 2001
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.65.201305
©2002 American Physical Society