133,926 research outputs found
Inelastic tunnel diodes
Power is extracted from plasmons, photons, or other guided electromagnetic waves at infrared to midultraviolet frequencies by inelastic tunneling in metal-insulator-semiconductor-metal diodes. Inelastic tunneling produces power by absorbing plasmons to pump electrons to higher potential. Specifically, an electron from a semiconductor layer absorbs a plasmon and simultaneously tunnels across an insulator into metal layer which is at higher potential. The diode voltage determines the fraction of energy extracted from the plasmons; any excess is lost to heat
Solar energy converter using surface plasma waves
Sunlight is dispersed over a diffraction grating formed on the surface of a conducting film on a substrate. The angular dispersion controls the effective grating period so that a matching spectrum of surface plasmons is excited for parallel processing on the conducting film. The resulting surface plasmons carry energy to an array of inelastic tunnel diodes. This solar energy converter does not require different materials for each frequency band, and sunlight is directly converted to electricity in an efficient manner by extracting more energy from the more energetic photons
A new strategy for efficient solar energy conversion: Parallel-processing with surface plasmons
This paper introduces an advanced concept for direct conversion of sunlight to electricity, which aims at high efficiency by tailoring the conversion process to separate energy bands within the broad solar spectrum. The objective is to obtain a high level of spectrum-splitting without sequential losses or unique materials for each frequency band. In this concept, sunlight excites a spectrum of surface plasma waves which are processed in parallel on the same metal film. The surface plasmons transport energy to an array of metal-barrier-semiconductor diodes, where energy is extracted by inelastic tunneling. Diodes are tuned to different frequency bands by selecting the operating voltage and geometry, but all diodes share the same materials
Solar energy conversion using surface plasmons for broadband energy transport
A new strategy for efficient solar energy conversion based on parallel processing with surface plasmons is introduced. The approach is unique in identifying: (1) a broadband carrier with suitable range for energy transport, and (2) a technique to extract more energy from the more energetic photons, without sequential losses or unique materials for each frequency band. The aim is to overcome the fundamental losses associated with the broad solar spectrum and to achieve a higher level of spectrum splitting than has been possible in semiconductor systems
Results of the 1995 Illinois Groundhog (Woodchuck) Hunter Survey
ID: 875; Administrative Report, PR Project W-112-RReport issued on: June 27, 199
Application of transport techniques to the analysis of NERVA shadow shields
A radiation shield internal to the NERVA nuclear rocket reactor required to limit the neutron and photon radiation levels at critical components located external to the reactor was evaluated. Two significantly different shield mockups were analyzed: BATH, a composite mixture of boron carbide, aluminum and titanium hydride, and a borated steel-liquid hydrogen system. Based on the comparisons between experimental and calculated neutron and photon radiation levels, the following conclusions were noted: (1) The ability of two-dimensional discrete ordinates code to predict the radiation levels internal to and at the surface of the shield mockups was clearly demonstrated. (2) Internal to the BATH shield mockups, the one-dimensional technique predicted the axial variation of neutron fluxes and photon dose rates; however, the magnitude of the neutron fluxes was about a factor of 1.8 lower than the two-dimensional analysis and the photon dose rate was a factor of 1.3 lower
Computer program for structural analysis of layered orthotropic ring-stiffened shells of revolution (SALORS): Linear stress analysis option
Program handles segmented, laminar, orthotropic shells with discrete rings. Meridional variations are handled in material properties, temperatures, and wall thickness. Allows for linear variations of temperature through each layer of shell wall
Effective Hamiltonian for fermions in an optical lattice across Feshbach resonance
We derive the Hamiltonian for cold fermionic atoms in an optical lattice
across a broad Feshbach resonance, taking into account of both multiband
occupations and neighboring-site collisions. Under typical configurations, the
resulting Hamiltonian can be dramatically simplified to an effective
single-band model, which describes a new type of resonance between the local
dressed molecules and the valence bond states of fermionic atoms at neighboring
sites. On different sides of such a resonance, the effective Hamiltonian is
reduced to either a t-J model for the fermionic atoms or an XXZ model for the
dressed molecules. The parameters in these models are experimentally tunable in
the full range, which allows for observation of various phase transitions.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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