[ExI] cool check this

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Sat May 7 04:00:31 UTC 2011


 

 




Tuning into solar power with nanoantennas



05 May 2011

A nanoscale antenna that can collect light and convert it into a current
shows promise for energy harvesting applications, say its US developers.
These nanoantennas could be combined with conventional solar cells to
increase the portion of visible light that they can turn into electricity.

Nanoantenna structure


By altering the length of nanoantennas they can be tuned to turn light from
the whole of the visible spectrum into electricity

 

C Science/AAAS

Just as a car antenna can pick up radio waves, an optical nanoantenna can
receive light waves. Naomi Halas and colleagues at Rice University in
Houston have taken the concept of the optical nanoantenna one stage further
to make a photosensor. They combined nanoantennas that detect light, with a
photodiode that converts light energy into an electrical current.  

The team grew arrays of gold nanoantennas, between 110 nm and 158 nm in
length, directly onto a silicon semiconductor surface and exposed the device
to infrared radiation. Halas explains that the length of the nanoantennas is
very important as the wavelength of light detected - in this case infrared -
corresponds to the length of the nanoantenna used.  

She explains that the absorbed infrared radiation is turned into 'hot'
electrons - highly energetic electrons - which can jump the barrier between
the gold and the silicon to produce a current. Halas believes the device has
a 'unique capability for light harvesting that could significantly advance
devices such as solar cells'. 

Martin Cryan, an expert in nanophotonics at the University of Bristol, UK,
believes this is an exciting new direction for optical antennas. 'This work
includes the photon to electron conversion function, which is important for
both energy and information processing and could lead to many new
technological developments in both these areas,' he says. 

David Andrews, an expert on energy harvesting materials from the University
of East Anglia, also in the UK, speculates that Halas's design could lead to
the development of relatively cheap detectors operating in the near infrared
region, 1250-1650 nm. But at this stage he is concerned about the efficiency
of the device, which is about 1 per cent. 'The target efficiency will be too
small for realistic energy harvesting purposes; the real applications are
likely to lie in the realm of photosensing and imaging,' he says. 

Halas concedes that more work is necessary to improve the efficiency of the
device. 'There are numerous ways we can improve the current efficiencies by
refining the device design and exploiting the same physical principle,' she
tells Chemistry World. 'Our device is a marriage of nanoscale optics with
electronics, and we anticipate that it will stimulate further advances in
the convergence of these fields,' she adds.

Mike Brown 

 

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