Strain effects in large-scale atomistic quantum dot simulations

Atomistic computations of electronic properties for nanostructures with strain (such as self-assembled quantum dots) typically consist of two components - a calculation of the individual atomic positions and the eigenstates of interest in the resulting Hamiltonian. Such simulations ultimately require artificial boundary conditions either through a truncation of the simulation domain or by the imposition of periodic boundary conditions, which necessarily introduce inaccuracies in both components of the computation. In simulations that include up to about 20 million atoms, it is demonstrated that the simulation domain truncation has little impact on the direct computation of the electronic energies but causes considerable inaccuracies in the calculation of the atomic positions unless the simulation domain is made much larger than the central quantum dot structure. The long-range nature of the lattice distortions induced by lattice mismatch is consequently expected to significantly alter the electronic structure of nearby quantum dots.