The time-independent
Schrödinger equation for the
wave function of a particle in one dimension in a
potential is -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \frac{d^2 \psi(x)}{dx^2} + V(x) \psi(x) = E \psi(x), where is the reduced
Planck constant, and is the
energy of the particle. The delta potential is the potential V(x) = \lambda \delta(x), where is the
Dirac delta function. It is called a
delta potential well if is negative, and a
delta potential barrier if is positive. The delta has been defined to occur at the origin for simplicity; a shift in the delta function's argument does not change any of the following results.
Solving the Schrödinger equation Source: The potential splits the space in two parts ( and ). In each of these parts the potential is zero, and the Schrödinger equation reduces to \frac{d^2\psi}{dx^2} = -\frac{2mE}{\hbar^2} \psi; this is a
linear differential equation with
constant coefficients, whose solutions are
linear combinations of and , where the
wave number is related to the energy by k = \frac{\sqrt{2mE}}{\hbar}. In general, due to the presence of the delta potential in the origin, the coefficients of the solution need not be the same in both half-spaces: \psi(x) = \begin{cases} \psi_\text{L}(x) = A_\text{r} e^{ikx} + A_\text{l} e^{-ikx}, & \text{ if } x 0, \end{cases} where, in the case of positive energies (real ), represents a wave traveling to the right, and one traveling to the left. One obtains a relation between the coefficients by imposing that the wavefunction be continuous at the origin: \psi(0) = \psi_L(0) = \psi_R(0) = A_r + A_l = B_r + B_l, A second relation can be found by studying the derivative of the wavefunction. Normally, we could also impose differentiability at the origin, but this is not possible because of the delta potential. However, if we integrate the Schrödinger equation around , over an interval [-\varepsilon,\varepsilon]: -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \int_{-\varepsilon}^{+\varepsilon} \psi''(x) \,dx + \int_{-\varepsilon}^{+\varepsilon} V(x)\psi(x) \,dx = E \int_{-\varepsilon}^{+\varepsilon} \psi(x) \,dx. In the limit as \varepsilon \to 0, the right-hand side of this equation vanishes; the left-hand side becomes -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} [\psi_R'(0) - \psi_L'(0)] + \lambda \psi(0), because \int_{-\varepsilon}^{+\varepsilon} \psi''(x) \,dx = [\psi'(+\varepsilon) - \psi'(-\varepsilon)]. Substituting the definition of into this expression yields -\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} ik (-A_r + A_l + B_r - B_l) + \lambda(A_r + A_l) = 0. The boundary conditions thus give the following restrictions on the coefficients \begin{cases} A_r + A_l - B_r - B_l &= 0,\\ -A_r + A_l + B_r - B_l &= \frac{2m\lambda}{ik\hbar^2} (A_r + A_l). \end{cases} === Bound state (
E \psi(x) = \begin{cases} \psi_\text{L}(x) = A_\text{l} e^{\kappa x}, & \text{ if } x \le 0, \\ \psi_\text{R}(x) = B_\text{r} e^{-\kappa x}, & \text{ if } x \ge 0. \end{cases} From the boundary conditions and normalization conditions, it follows that \begin{cases} A_\text{l} = B_\text{r} = \sqrt{\kappa},\\ \kappa = -\frac{m \lambda}{\hbar^2}, \end{cases} from which it follows that must be negative, that is, the bound state only exists for the well, and not for the barrier. The
Fourier transform of this wave function is a
Lorentzian function. The energy of the bound state is then E = -\frac{\hbar^2\kappa^2}{2m} = -\frac{m\lambda^2}{2\hbar^2}.
Scattering (E > 0) For positive energies, the particle is free to move in either half-space: or . It may be scattered at the delta-function potential. The quantum case can be studied in the following situation: a particle incident on the barrier from the left side . It may be reflected or transmitted . To find the amplitudes for reflection and transmission for incidence from the left, we put in the above equations (incoming particle), (reflection), (no incoming particle from the right) and (transmission), and solve for and even though we do not have any equations in . The result is t = \cfrac{1}{1 - \cfrac{m\lambda}{i\hbar^2k}}, \quad r = \cfrac{1}{\cfrac{i\hbar^2 k}{m\lambda} - 1}. Due to the mirror
symmetry of the model, the amplitudes for incidence from the right are the same as those from the left. The result is that there is a non-zero probability R = |r|^2 = \cfrac{1}{1 + \cfrac{\hbar^4 k^2}{m^2\lambda^2}} = \cfrac{1}{1 + \cfrac{2\hbar^2 E}{m \lambda^2}} for the particle to be reflected. This does not depend on the sign of , that is, a barrier has the same probability of reflecting the particle as a well. This is a significant difference from
classical mechanics, where the reflection probability would be 1 for the barrier (the particle simply bounces back), and 0 for the well (the particle passes through the well undisturbed). The probability for transmission is T = |t|^2 = 1 - R = \cfrac{1}{1 + \cfrac{m^2\lambda^2}{\hbar^4 k^2}} = \cfrac{1}{1 + \cfrac{m \lambda^2}{2\hbar^2 E}}.
Remarks and application The calculation presented above may at first seem unrealistic and hardly useful. However, it has proved to be a suitable model for a variety of real-life systems. One such example regards the interfaces between two
conducting materials. In the bulk of the materials, the motion of the electrons is quasi-free and can be described by the
kinetic term in the above Hamiltonian with an
effective mass . Often, the surfaces of such materials are covered with oxide layers or are not ideal for other reasons. This thin, non-conducting layer may then be modeled by a local delta-function potential as above. Electrons may then tunnel from one material to the other giving rise to a current. The operation of a
scanning tunneling microscope (STM) relies on this tunneling effect. In that case, the barrier is due to the air between the tip of the STM and the underlying object. The strength of the barrier is related to the separation being stronger the further apart the two are. For a more general model of this situation, see
Finite potential barrier (QM). The delta function potential barrier is the limiting case of the model considered there for very high and narrow barriers. The above model is one-dimensional while the space around us is three-dimensional. So, in fact, one should solve the Schrödinger equation in three dimensions. On the other hand, many systems only change along one coordinate direction and are translationally invariant along the others. The Schrödinger equation may then be reduced to the case considered here by an Ansatz for the wave function of the type \Psi(x,y,z)=\psi(x)\phi(y,z)\,\!. Alternatively, it is possible to generalize the delta function to exist on the surface of some domain
D (see
Laplacian of the indicator). The delta function model is actually a one-dimensional version of the
Hydrogen atom according to the
dimensional scaling method developed by the group of
Dudley R. Herschbach The delta function model becomes particularly useful with the
double-well Dirac Delta function model which represents a one-dimensional version of the
Hydrogen molecule ion, as shown in the following section. == Double delta potential ==