4,914 research outputs found
The Establishment of a Production-ready Manufacturing Process Utilizing Thin Silicon Substrates for Solar Cells
During the months of February and March, work towards the goals of the contract were started as scheduled. The first shipment of thin substrates were received and wafer processing was initiated. The objective of the contract is to investigate, develop and characterize the methods for establishing a production-ready manufacturing process which utilizes thin silicon substrates for solar cells. The thin substrates to be manufactured are three inches diameter, p-type Czochralski wafers of approximately 1 Omega cm resistivity. The wafers are prepared by sawing directly to thickness of 8 mils and 5 mils. To ensure removal of residual saw damage, most substrates are chemically etched to final thicknesses of 7 mils and 4 mils. The thin substrates are used to fabricate solar cells by standard processing techniques
A simplified, compact static shift register
Shift register was developed which uses only one D type flip-flop and improves packaging density by approximately 25% over the usual arrangement. Circuit is compromise between full master-slave arrangement and dynamic shift register, with limitation only of length of time that clock can be held high during new data entry
Electric-field control of a hydrogenic donor's spin in a semiconductor
An AC electric field applied to a donor-bound electron in a semiconductor
modulates the orbital character of its wave function, which affects the
electron's spin dynamics via the spin-orbit interaction. Numerical calculations
of the spin dynamics of a hydrogenic donor (Si) embedded in GaAs, using a
real-space multi-band k.p formalism, show the high symmetry of the hydrogenic
donor state results in strongly nonlinear dependences of the electronic g
tensor on applied fields. A nontrivial consequence is that the most rapid Rabi
oscillations occur for electric fields modulated at a subharmonic of the Larmor
frequency
Modeled nitrogen loading to Narragansett Bay: 1850 to 2015
Nutrient loading to estuaries with heavily populated watersheds can have profound ecological consequences. In evaluating policy options for managing nitrogen (N), it is helpful to understand current and historic spatial loading patterns to the system. We modeled N inputs to Narragansett Bay from 1850 to 2000, using data on population, human waste disposal, livestock, fertilizer, and atmospheric deposition. We found that total N loading to the bay increased 250% from 1850 to 2000, and 80% from 1900 to 2000. Loading to the upper bay increased far more than that to the lower bay, and the most important source shifted from non-point animal waste to human waste concentrated at sewage treatment facilities. We also modeled future N loads in 2015 under four management scenarios. Planned improvements in sewage treatment would reduce N loads 9% below business-as-usual, to the 1990 loading rate. Greater reductions, to circa 1900 rates of loading, may be possible
Phase 1 of the automated array assembly task of the low cost silicon solar array project
The results of a study of process variables and solar cell variables are presented. Interactions between variables and their effects upon control ranges of the variables are identified. The results of a cost analysis for manufacturing solar cells are discussed. The cost analysis includes a sensitivity analysis of a number of cost factors
Accuracy of circular polarization as a measure of spin polarization in quantum dot qubits
A quantum dot spin LED provides a test of carrier spin injection into a
qubit, as well as a means of analyzing carrier spin injection in general and
local spin polarization. The polarization of the observed light is, however,
significantly influenced by the dot geometry so the spin may be more polarized
than the emitted light would naively suggest. We have calculated carrier
polarization-dependent optical matrix elements using 8-band strain-dependent
k.p theory for InAs/GaAs self-assembled quantum dots (SAQDs) for electron and
hole spin injection into a range of quantum dot sizes and shapes, and for
arbitrary emission directions. The observed circular polarization does not
depend on whether the injected spin-polarized carriers are electrons or holes,
but is strongly influenced by the SAQD geometry and emission direction.
Calculations for typical SAQD geometries with emission along [110] show light
that is only ~5% circularly polarized for spin states that are 100% polarized
along [110]. Therefore observed polarizations [Chye et al. PRB 66, 201301(R)]
of ~1% imply a spin polarization within the dot of ~20%. We also find that
measuring along the growth direction gives near unity conversion of spin to
photon polarization, and is the least sensitive to uncertainties in SAQD
geometry.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Phase 1 of the automated array assembly task of the low cost silicon solar array project
The state of technology readiness for the automated production of solar cells and modules is reviewed. Individual process steps and process sequences for making solar cells and modules were evaluated both technically and economically. High efficiency with a suggested cell goal of 15% was stressed. It is concluded that the technology exists to manufacture solar cells which will meet program goals
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