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New
Coating Is Virtual Black Hole for Reflections Non-reflecting
material may help solar cells catch more of the Sun's rays
March 2, 2007
Layers
of silica nanorods look like shag carpet (top) when viewed
with a scanning electron microscope. When coated on a
surface (bottom), the new anti-reflective material looks
dark (left) in contrast to other anti-reflective coatings.
Credit:
E. Fred Schubert and Jong Kyu Kim, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute
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Researchers have created an
anti-reflective coating that allows light to travel through it,
but lets almost none bounce off its surface. At least 10 times
more effective than the coating on sunglasses or computer
monitors, the material, which is made of silica nanorods, may be
used to channel light into solar cells or allow more photons to
surge through the surface of a light-emitting diode (LED).
Publishing in the March 1,
2007, Nature Photonics,
lead author Jong Kyu Kim and a team from Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in Troy, N.Y., reveal how they crafted the coating,
which reflects almost as little light as do molecules of air.
Guided by National Science
Foundation-supported electrical engineer Fred Schubert, the
researchers developed a process based on an already common method
for depositing layers of silica, the building block of quartz,
onto computer chips and other surfaces.
The method grows ranks of
nanoscale rods that lie at the same angle. That degree of the
angle is determined by temperature. Under a microscope, the films
look like tiny slices of shag carpet.
By laying down multiple layers,
each at a different angle, the researchers created thin films
that are uniquely capable of controlling light. With the right
layers in the right configuration, the researchers believe they
can even create a film that will reflect no light at all.
One critical application for
the material is in the development of next-generation solar
cells. By preventing reflections, the coating would allow more
light, and more wavelengths of light, to transmit through the
protective finish on a solar cell surface and into the cell
itself. Engineers may be able to use such a technique to boost
the amount of energy a cell can collect, bypassing current
efficiency limits.
Another application would
involve coating LEDs to eliminate reflections that cut down the
amount of light the LED can emit. The researchers hope the
efficiency gains could allow the light sources to compete more
effectively with fluorescent and incandescent bulbs. So, they
will next focus their attention on solid state lighting.
Source:
NSF
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