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arxiv: 2605.16055 · v1 · pith:UFJIBWXDnew · submitted 2026-05-15 · ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Fuzzy band structure of quantum dots by Bloch Orbital Expansion, unconventional insights into geometry-electronic structure relations

Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 17:12 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords quantum dotsBloch orbital expansionfuzzy band structuresurface statescore-shell structuresmid-gap orbitalsdensity functional theorynanocrystals
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The pith

Bloch orbital expansion turns quantum dot orbitals into fuzzy band structures that link surface geometry to mid-gap states and core-shell alignments.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper applies Bloch orbital expansion to density functional theory orbitals of quantum dots to convert them from real space into a momentum-space representation. This yields a fuzzy band structure that can be compared directly against bulk band structures. For III-V and II-VI quantum dots with truncated unpassivated facets, the expansion identifies mid-gap orbitals as originating from bulk surface orbitals, a distinction difficult to make from real-space views alone. Quantum dots with reconstructed facets instead show delocalized orbitals formed by superpositions of bulk Bloch orbitals. The same expansion applied to atomistic core/shell models makes the core and shell band alignment visible in momentum space.

Core claim

Bloch orbital expansion expresses quantum dot orbitals as combinations of bulk Bloch orbitals, producing a fuzzy band structure. Truncated unpassivated facets generate mid-gap orbitals derived from bulk surface orbitals. Reconstructed facets produce delocalized orbitals as superpositions of bulk Bloch orbitals. Atomistic core/shell models allow the expansion to distinguish core and shell contributions to band alignment.

What carries the argument

Bloch orbital expansion (BOE), which projects finite quantum dot wavefunctions onto a basis of bulk Bloch orbitals to obtain a momentum-space fuzzy band structure.

If this is right

  • Truncated unpassivated facets in III-V and II-VI QDs produce mid-gap orbitals derived from bulk surface orbitals.
  • Reconstructed facets yield delocalized orbitals formed by superposition of bulk Bloch orbitals.
  • Atomistic core/shell QD models permit clear identification of core/shell band alignment through the expansion.
  • The fuzzy band structure provides a direct bridge between computed geometry and measured electronic properties in nanocrystals.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The method could be tested on quantum dots of varying sizes to see how the fuzziness of the band structure scales with confinement strength.
  • Surface passivation strategies might be evaluated by whether they suppress the surface-derived mid-gap components in the expanded representation.
  • Similar expansions applied to other nanostructures could reveal whether facet geometry universally controls trap states through bulk orbital inheritance.

Load-bearing premise

The Bloch orbital expansion accurately maps the finite quantum dot orbitals onto bulk momentum space without major artifacts from the dot size or the expansion procedure.

What would settle it

Checking whether the dominant Bloch components of mid-gap orbitals in unpassivated quantum dot models align in energy and character with the surface-derived states of the corresponding bulk band structure.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.16055 by Ivan Infante, Jordi Llusar, Zeger Hens.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Bloch orbital expansion of QD orbitals. (a) Isosurface of the LUMO of a 3.5 nm Cl-terminated CdSe QD, highlighting positive and negative parts in red and blue, respectively. (b) Projection of the LUMO on the 𝑥𝑦 plane, using (positive) red and (negative) blue shading to represent the magnitude of the wavefunction. (c) Fourier transform of the wavefunction in the 𝑘!𝑘" plane, as calculated from the projected … view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: The fuzzy band structure of a 4 nm Pb706S586Cl240 (PbS-1532) QD. (a) Representation of the atomic structure of PbS-1532. (b) fcc Brillouin zone, with the path along which the BOE is calculated indicated in red. (c) Color-coded image representation of the BOE as a function of the wavenumber along the path in BZ1 and the energy of the different orbitals. Color coding in logarithmic scale as indicated. For ob… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: The fuzzy band structure of Cl-terminated InAs QDs. (a) Representation of the atomic structure of InAs￾1116. (b) fcc Brillouin zone, with the path along which the BOE is calculated indicated in red. (c) Color coded image representation of the BOE of InAs-1116 (3.0 nm) as a function of the wavenumber along the path in BZ1 and the energy of the different states. Color coding similar to Figure 2c. For obtaini… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Impact on surface reconstruction on the QD eigenstates. (a) Representation of the atomic structure of CdSe-771, a QD model cut from bulk CdSe without surface reconstruction. (b) Color coded image representation of the BOE of CdSe-771 as a function of the wavenumber. The path in BZ1 and the color coding are similar to Figure 3c. For obtaining a consistent color coded fuzzy band structure, the BOE has been a… view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Fuzzy band structure of core/shell QDs. (a) Representation of the atomic structure of ZnSe/ZnS-1259. (b) Color coded image representation of the BOE of ZnSe/ZnS-1259 as a function of the wavenumber. The path in BZ1 and the color coding are similar to Figure 3c. For obtaining a consistent color coded fuzzy band structure, the BOE has been accumulated in energy bins 12.5 meV wide. The valence- and conduction… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The extension of ab-initio methods like density functional theory (DFT) to quantum dot (QD) geometries has enabled researchers to explore relationships between QD surface termination and electronic structure. However, fully utilizing the data from DFT requires novel classification methods for QD orbitals. Here, we identify relationships between QD geometry and electronic structure by transforming real-space QD orbitals into momentum-space using Bloch orbital expansion (BOE), yielding a fuzzy QD band structure. Comparing with bulk band structures, we show that truncated, unpassivated facets in III-V and II-VI QDs produce mid-gap orbitals derived from bulk surface orbitals; an identification challenging in real space. QDs with reconstructed facets, however, feature delocalized orbitals formed by superposition of bulk Bloch orbitals. Moreover, we prepare for the first time atomistic core/shell QD models and by the BOE expansion we can clearly identify the core/shell band alignment not possible in real space. These findings emphasize BOE as a vital tool for connecting computational and experimental insights in nanocrystal research.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript introduces Bloch Orbital Expansion (BOE) to transform real-space DFT orbitals of quantum dots into a momentum-space representation, producing a 'fuzzy' QD band structure. It claims that truncated unpassivated facets in III-V and II-VI QDs yield mid-gap orbitals derived from bulk surface orbitals, while reconstructed facets produce delocalized orbitals as superpositions of bulk Bloch orbitals; atomistic core/shell models are also presented to identify core/shell band alignments via BOE that are not visible in real space.

Significance. If validated without significant artifacts, the BOE approach could offer a useful complement to real-space analysis for linking QD geometry to electronic features, particularly for surface states and heterostructures. The preparation of atomistic core/shell models is a constructive element that extends the method's applicability.

major comments (2)
  1. [Methods (BOE expansion)] § Methods (BOE expansion): the central claim that BOE coefficients recover bulk-like dispersions and surface-state origins for mid-gap and delocalized orbitals requires demonstration that truncation and surface mismatch do not introduce momentum artifacts. No convergence tests with respect to expansion cutoff, per-orbital normalization, or BOE-projected DOS versus the parent DFT calculation (especially in the large-QD limit) are reported, leaving the mapping vulnerable to the finite-size mixing concern.
  2. [Results (unpassivated facets, III-V/II-VI QDs)] § Results (unpassivated facets, III-V/II-VI QDs): the identification of mid-gap orbitals as derived from bulk surface orbitals is load-bearing for the geometry-electronic structure relation but lacks quantitative metrics such as projection overlaps, fidelity scores, or direct comparison to real-space orbital character. This weakens the assertion that the origin is 'challenging in real space' yet clearly resolved by BOE.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract and Introduction] The term 'fuzzy band structure' is introduced in the abstract and title but is not explicitly defined or quantified (e.g., via broadening parameter or k-space resolution) in the main text.
  2. [Figures] Figure captions for orbital visualizations should include the specific k-points or energy windows used for the BOE projections to allow reproducibility.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their detailed and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each of the major comments below and have made revisions to strengthen the presentation of the BOE method and its applications.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: § Methods (BOE expansion): the central claim that BOE coefficients recover bulk-like dispersions and surface-state origins for mid-gap and delocalized orbitals requires demonstration that truncation and surface mismatch do not introduce momentum artifacts. No convergence tests with respect to expansion cutoff, per-orbital normalization, or BOE-projected DOS versus the parent DFT calculation (especially in the large-QD limit) are reported, leaving the mapping vulnerable to the finite-size mixing concern.

    Authors: We agree that explicit convergence tests would provide stronger validation for the BOE approach. In the revised manuscript, we have added a new subsection in the Methods section detailing convergence with respect to the expansion cutoff. We also include a comparison of the BOE-projected density of states with the parent DFT calculation for the largest quantum dots studied, demonstrating that finite-size mixing effects are negligible within the energy window of interest. These additions confirm that truncation and surface mismatch do not introduce significant momentum artifacts for the states analyzed. revision: yes

  2. Referee: § Results (unpassivated facets, III-V/II-VI QDs): the identification of mid-gap orbitals as derived from bulk surface orbitals is load-bearing for the geometry-electronic structure relation but lacks quantitative metrics such as projection overlaps, fidelity scores, or direct comparison to real-space orbital character. This weakens the assertion that the origin is 'challenging in real space' yet clearly resolved by BOE.

    Authors: To provide quantitative support for the orbital identifications, we have incorporated projection overlap calculations between the mid-gap QD orbitals and the corresponding bulk surface orbitals in the revised Results section. These overlaps, along with a direct comparison to real-space orbital plots, quantify the fidelity and highlight why the surface origin is more readily apparent in the momentum-space representation. We believe this addresses the concern while preserving the manuscript's emphasis on the complementary nature of BOE to real-space analysis. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

BOE transformation and bulk comparison form an independent analysis chain

full rationale

The derivation applies a Bloch orbital expansion to DFT-computed real-space orbitals of finite QDs, producing a momentum-space fuzzy band structure that is then directly compared to reference bulk band structures. This yields identifications of mid-gap surface-derived states versus delocalized superpositions and core/shell alignments. No equations reduce the output quantities to fitted inputs or self-definitions by construction; the expansion is a linear projection whose coefficients are computed from the DFT wavefunctions rather than adjusted to match the claimed orbital origins. Self-citations, if present for the BOE formalism itself, are not load-bearing for the geometry-electronic structure conclusions, which rest on explicit numerical comparisons outside the method definition. The analysis is therefore self-contained against external DFT benchmarks and does not exhibit any of the enumerated circularity patterns.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract was available; no explicit free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are stated.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5715 in / 1004 out tokens · 52813 ms · 2026-05-20T17:12:33.026240+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

3 extracted references · 3 canonical work pages

  1. [1]

    Overview of valence-band offset in eV as obtained from (bold) analysis of fuzzy bands obtained through Bloch-state expansion and (normal) literature-reported DFT calculations on bulk semiconductors.41 The difference between both offsets is indicated in italics, highlighting significant (blue) positive and (red) negative deviations between QD and bulk DFT ...

  2. [2]

    (40) Lannoo, M

    DOI: 10.1238/Physica.Regular.067a00253. (40) Lannoo, M. Basic Principles Governing the Surface Atomic-Structure of Zinc Blende Semiconductors. Materials Science and Engineering B-Solid State Materials for Advanced Technology 1993, 22 (1), 1-8. DOI: 10.1016/0921-5107(93)90214-8. (41) Wei, S.-H.; Zunger, A. Calculated natural band offsets of all II–VI and I...

  3. [3]

    (50) Verma, P.; Truhlar, D. G. HLE17: An Improved Local Exchange–Correlation Functional for Computing Semiconductor Band Gaps and Molecular Excitation Energies. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2017, 121 (13), 7144-7154. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b01066. (51) VandeVondele, J.; Hutter, J. Gaussian Basis Sets for Accurate Calculations on Molecular Systems i...