An empirical scpa3 tight-binding (TB) model is applied to the
investigation of electronic states in semiconductor quantum dots. A basis set
of three p-orbitals at the anions and one s-orbital at the cations is
chosen. Matrix elements up to the second nearest neighbors and the spin-orbit
coupling are included in our TB-model. The parametrization is chosen so that
the effective masses, the spin-orbit-splitting and the gap energy of the bulk
CdSe and ZnSe are reproduced. Within this reduced scpa3 TB-basis the
valence (p-) bands are excellently reproduced and the conduction (s-) band is
well reproduced close to the Γ-point, i.e. near to the band gap. In
terms of this model much larger systems can be described than within a (more
realistic) sp3s∗-basis. The quantum dot is modelled by using the (bulk)
TB-parameters for the particular material at those sites occupied by atoms of
this material. Within this TB-model we study pyramidal-shaped CdSe quantum dots
embedded in a ZnSe matrix and free spherical CdSe quantum dots (nanocrystals).
Strain-effects are included by using an appropriate model strain field. Within
the TB-model, the strain-effects can be artifically switched off to investigate
the infuence of strain on the bound electronic states and, in particular, their
spatial orientation. The theoretical results for spherical nanocrystals are
compared with data from tunneling spectroscopy and optical experiments.
Furthermore the influence of the spin-orbit coupling is investigated