TechJournal South
Header

Posts Tagged ‘solar cells’

New tool may result in smaller, faster optoelectronics

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

Optics LettersThe steady improvement in speed and power of modern electronics may soon hit the brakes unless new ways are found to pack more structures into microscopic spaces. Unfortunately, engineers are already approaching the limit of what light—the choice tool for “tweezing” tiny features—can achieve. But there may be a way of reaching beyond this so-called “diffraction limit” by precisely steering, in real time, a curve-shaped beam of weird “virtual particles” known as surface plasmons.

This technique, described in the Optical Society’s (OSA) journal Optics Letters, opens the possibility of even smaller, faster communications systems and optoelectronic devices. Examples of optoelectronic devices used today include photodiodes such as solar cells, integrated optical circuits used in communications, and charged coupled imaging devices at the heart of cell phone cameras and receivers on the world’s most advanced telescopes. This method also may yield new, important tools for research in chemistry, biology, and medicine.

The key to this innovation is the ability—for the first time—to actively manipulate a blended stream of light and plasma, known as a plasmonic Airy beam. The beam, owing to the laws of electromagnetism, travels, not in a straight line like the beams of light to which we are accustomed, but rather in an arc. “It’s an odd thing for sure, as light is supposed to travel in a straight line,” says Peng Zhang, a member of the research team with the National Science Foundation (NSF) Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center of the University of California, Berkeley and Department of Physics and Astronomy at San Francisco State University (SFSU).

“That’s why people are so crazy about these kinds of interesting beams.”

As the beam first strikes a metal surface (typically at an irregular feature called a grating structure), it stirs up small waves of electrons at the metal-insulator interface. These waves, which can be thought of as “virtual particles” known as surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs), then follow the curved trajectory of the Airy beams. And, just as ocean waves move objects on the surface of the water, the SPPs can be directed to manipulate ultrafine-scale features on the surface of a metal.

SPPs are already essential elements in the design and manufacture of optoelectronic devices. The reason they’re so critical is that they can affect extremely small-scale objects, smaller than the diffraction limit, or half of the wavelength of light used to create SPPs.

The current systems, however, have a significant drawback: they required fixed, permanent nanostructures to direct the SPPs. This lack of flexibility severely limits their uses in nano-system design and manufacture. But by being able to manipulate the Airy beam, and therefore the SPPs, in real time, the new design gives scientists on-the-fly control (see Fig. 1).

“We have demonstrated a new way of routing the flow of surface plasmons without any guiding structures,” says Xiang Zhang, who led this research and is the director of the NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center at Berkeley and a faculty scientist with the Materials Sciences Division of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Lack of a guiding structure key

The lack of guiding structures, according to Xiang Zhang, is the critical innovation in their design. Currently, to manipulate surface plasmons over two-dimensional metal surfaces, different elements such as waveguides, lenses, beam splitters, and reflectors need to be created. This is done by either structuring metal surfaces (fabricating some permanent nanostructures) or placing insulators on metals. These permanent guiding structures cannot be reconfigured; once the structure is fabricated it cannot be changed in real time.

Computer controlled optics allow steering the beams

By using computer-controlled optics, however, the research team has developed a way to steer and manipulate the beams, precisely directing their trajectories to specific spots on an optical surface and adjusting them as needed. Due to their unique arc-shaped paths, the beams have the added ability to bypass surface roughness and defects, or even vault over obstacles.

“These on-the-fly adjustments are extremely desirable,” says Zhigang Chen, a principal investigator with the Department of Physics and Astronomy at SFSU. “They enable reconfigurable optical interconnections in ultra-compact integrated photonic circuits, which are at the core of many high-speed computing technologies. They also would enable on-chip nanoparticle manipulations for chemical, medical, or biological research purposes.”

The Airy beams used to direct the flow of plasmons also remain coherent, not fanning out or distorting as they travel along their curved trajectories, much in the same way that laser light remains coherent even after traveling great distances.

To create the Airy beams, the researchers used a laser beam and modulated its phase, or wave front, with a spatial light modulator (a device similar to a miniature liquid crystal display) controlled by a personal computer. By continuously changing the specially designed patterns in the computer, they were able to dynamically control the trajectories of the beam in real time.

Results show new direction

“These results point out a new direction for dynamically routing surface energies without any permanent guiding structures,” says Peng Zhang, “which could inspire researchers from different areas to develop new technologies or tools for a variety of applications.” For example, in nano-photonics, researchers may design practical reconfigurable plasmonic devices for ultra-compact integrated photonic circuits. In biology and chemistry, researchers may establish new tools for dynamically manipulating nanoparticles or molecules, and improving the performance of sensors.

“The ultrafine wavelength nature of surface plasmons makes them a promising tool for future nanolithography or nanoimaging applications,” says research team member Sheng Wang, also of the NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center. “Now, with the dynamic tunable plasmonic Airy beams, researchers may also shed new light on ultrahigh resolution bioimaging. For example, by bypassing obstacles and directly shining a beam on a target sample, background noise can be greatly reduced, which would enable more accurate imaging.”

“This method may also encourage researchers in other fields to manipulate the surface waves in other low-dimensional systems, including graphenes, topological insulators, and magnetic thin films,” says fellow team member Yongmin Liu of the NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center.

This research was supported by the U.S. Army Research Office, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the National Science Foundation.

Only two Southeast firms make Wall Street Journal’s Next Big Thing list

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

AppiaATLANTA, GA & DURHAM, NC – Only two Southeast firms landed on the Wall Street Journal’s “The Next Big Thing 2011″ list of the “The top 50 venture-funded companies. Durham, NC-based appia Inc., the mobile app store company headed by Jud Bowman, is number 15 on the list. Georga-based Suniva, which makes solar cells with improved peformance over conventional types, is number 38.

Thirty-five of the companies are based in California. At TechMedia’s recent Southeast Venture Conference in Atlanta March 2-3, Mark Heesen, president of the National Venture Capital Association, said during a panel discussion that California may become even more dominant than it is already in the venture ecosystem.

Introducing the list, the WSJ wrote, “Venture capitalists are betting that the next Google Inc. or Facebook Inc. will have a name like Xactly, Chegg or Zoosk. In what may be a sign of a re-inflating Web bubble, The Wall Street Journal’s second annual ranking of 50 venture-capital-backed companies shows investors are chasing after Internet firms, many with a consumer focus.”

It notes that even firms without particular tech focus, healthcare and business services companies, for instance, are incorporating social networking or mobile technology into their businesses. Mobile communications, health care and business software firms make up the bulk of the list.

To qualify for the list, which was compiled by VentureSource, a unit of WSJ’s parent company, News Corp., a company had to have nabbed venture funding in the last three years and have a valuation of less than $1 billion. Those criteria place a focus on less well known companies and eliminate firms such as Facebook, Groupon and Twitter.

While we have no argument with including appia and Suniva on the list, we can think of a number of Southeast firms we would include instead of some the WSJ chose. What do you think?

–Allan Maurer

See: Durham’s PocketGear reboots as Appia

Suniva to invest $15M, may raise $75M

 

TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:

SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org

Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com

Digital East: www.digitaleast.com

Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com

Breakthrough: see-thru solar window can generate electricity

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Solar cellsBURTONSVILLE, MD – Things are looking electric for New Energy Technologies Inc. (OTCBB:NENE). The company says that researchers developing its proprietary SolarWindow technology have achieved major scientific and technical breakthroughs, allowing it to unveil a working prototype of the world’s first-ever glass window capable of generating electricity in the upcoming weeks.

“We’re always keen to see innovations in our laboratories turn into meaningful commercial products”

Until now, solar panels have remained opaque, with the prospect of creating a see-thru glass window capable of generating electricity limited by the use of metals and various expensive processes which block visibility and prevent light from passing through glass surfaces.

The technology makes use of an organic solar array, which has the same desirable electrical properties as silicon, yet has a considerably better capacity to ‘optically absorb’ photons from light to generate electricity and achieves transparency through the innovative use of conducting polymers.

New Energy’s ability to generate electricity on see-thru glass is made possible by making use of the world’s smallest working organic solar cells, developed by Dr. Xiaomei Jiang at the University of South Florida.

Unlike conventional solar systems, New Energy’s solar cells generate electricity from both natural and artificial light sources, outperforming today’s commercial solar and thin-film technologies by as much as 10-fold.

Electricity generating road system

The University of South Florida Research Foundation has licensed Dr. Xiaomei Jiang’s groundbreaking discovery and important commercial processes and applications to New Energy Solar Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of New Energy Technologie.

New Energy also has a roadway system for generating electricity under development.

It works by capturing the kinetic energy produced by moving vehicles – a patent-pending technology, the subject of nine patent applications in the United States and two international patent filings. An estimated 250 million registered vehicles drive more than six billion miles on America’s roadways, every day; and

Suniva called “An American Success Story” by DOE Secretary

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

SunivaNORCROSS, GA – Department of Energy Secretary Steven Chu has called Georgia-based Suniva, which makes advanced solar cells, “An American Success Story,” on the White House blog.

The entry followed Chu’s visit to the Georgia Institute of Technology, where Suniva’s technology was developed.

Suniva evolved from the Georgia Tech University Center of Excellence in Photovoltaics (UCEP) and the research of its founding director, Dr. Ajeet Rohatgi, Suniva’s founder and CTO.

Chu wrote in his blog post that “This center and this company are powerful examples of how clean energy technology can drive job creation in the U.S. and increase our competitiveness.”

Suniva has exemplified the economic growth ideals put forth by the Obama administration by exporting production while creating U.S. jobs. Last year, Suniva exported more than 90 percent of its product to Asia and Europe.

“The U.S. needs to jump back into the clean energy race and play to win. That is the work we have started with investments like the Recovery Act and companies like Suniva,” continued Secretary Chu in his blog post. “Suniva has created more than 150 clean energy jobs manufacturing high-efficiency silicon solar cells and modules, using technology developed at UCEP.

Suniva, which makes silicon solar cells and modules of higher efficiency than others, ranked #2 in The Wall Street Journal’s Top 10 Venture-Backed Clean Technology Companies in 2010.

The company has also been one of TechJournal South’s Tech 50, and was a presenting company at the first Southeast Venture Conference in 2007.

For the full post on Suniva see: Success Story

Previously on Techjournal South:

Suniva has sunny outlook on solar cells

Suniva beams in $75M round

Suniva negotiating for $141M DOE loan

Blue Nano materials make better fuel cells, batteries and solar products

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

By Allan Maurer

soloar cell photo

Solar cells are only one product Blue Nano materials improve

CHARLOTTE, NC –Blue Nano does not tell anyone how it makes its high nanotechnology materials that help manufacture durable fuel cells, longer lasting batteries and better solar panels. “No one can match our quality and volume,” explains David Himebaugh, company president. “We can make more material in a month than anyone else can in a year.”

Although it is focused on the energy sector, its nanotech materials have a wide variety of other uses and potential uses in automotive, adhesives, photonics, electronics, health care, and other sectors. Blue Nano’s unique manufacturing process makes its products more cost effective for many uses, Himebaugh says.

Working in the world of the very small—there are 25.4 million nanometers in one inch—requires quite specialized knowledge. Even the physical properties of materials change at that ultra tiny scale. “Inert things become combustible, transparent ones become opaque. The rules are different,” explains Himebaugh.

The company’s Chief Technology Officer, Chang Chen developed the original process while in school at North Carolina State University, but Blue Nano has added many additional scientists and advanced the process considerably since the company was founded in 2007.

“The process is key,” he says. “We’re able to customize lengths and diameters and do it all in very high quality and high volume, so it’s cost effective.”

The company can take any of the natural elements it works with, copper, gold, silver, and so forth and cost-effectively create more surface area on them at the nanoscale. “That’s what we found the key to doing,” Himebaugh says.

A manufacturer using a gram of nanotech silver powder in a product could gain 3,000 times more surface area with a gram of Blue Nano’s silver wires, he says. That allows more efficient chemical reactions and lets the manufacturer use less material.

Blue Nano’s CAT-110 fuel cell catalyst begins with a thin, sponge-like membrane made out of gold. Platinum is then evenly coated across the top of the sponge at a thickness of only one nanometer. “Below that, you’re at the atomic level,” Himebaugh notes.

“Our stuff is good, durable, and less expensive,” he adds. Among other things, it increases fuel cell power density and far exceeds the Department of Energy’s performance standards for 2015. “Fuel cells are going to be powering quite a few things, from laptops to vehicles,” says Himebaugh, “and we can bring that much closer to happening, much quicker than people thought.”

The 15-employee company is self-funded. It sells its materials to original equipment manufacturers. It is one of 60 innovative companies presenting at the upcoming Southeast Venture Conference in Tysons Corner, VA, Feb. 24-25 (see: www.seventure.org).

Online: www.bluenanoinc.com