This paper introduces a novel method to account for quantum disorder effects
into the classical drift-diffusion model of semiconductor transport through the
localization landscape theory. Quantum confinement and quantum tunneling in the
disordered system change dramatically the energy barriers acting on the
perpendicular transport of heterostructures. In addition they lead to
percolative transport through paths of minimal energy in the 2D landscape of
disordered energies of multiple 2D quantum wells. This model solves the carrier
dynamics with quantum effects self-consistently and provides a computationally
much faster solver when compared with the Schr\"odinger equation resolution.
The theory also provides a good approximation to the density of states for the
disordered system over the full range of energies required to account for
transport at room-temperature. The current-voltage characteristics modeled by
3-D simulation of a full nitride-based light-emitting diode (LED) structure
with compositional material fluctuations closely match the experimental
behavior of high quality blue LEDs. The model allows also a fine analysis of
the quantum effects involved in carrier transport through such complex
heterostructures. Finally, details of carrier population and recombination in
the different quantum wells are given.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures, 6 table