27 research outputs found
Media 2: Dielectric based resonant guided wave networks
Originally published in Optics Express on 07 May 2012 (oe-20-10-10674
Media 1: Dielectric based resonant guided wave networks
Originally published in Optics Express on 07 May 2012 (oe-20-10-10674
Media 3: Dielectric based resonant guided wave networks
Originally published in Optics Express on 07 May 2012 (oe-20-10-10674
Nanophotonic Heterostructures for Efficient Propulsion and Radiative Cooling of Relativistic Light Sails
Light sails propelled
by radiation pressure from high-power lasers
have the potential to achieve relativistic spaceflight. In order to
propel a spacecraft to relativistic speeds, an ultrathin, gram-sized
light sail will need to be stably accelerated by lasers with ∼MW/cm<sup>2</sup> intensities operating in the near-infrared spectral range.
Such a laser-driven sail requires <i>multiband</i> electromagnetic
functionality: it must simultaneously exhibit very low absorptivity
in the (Doppler-broadened) laser beam spectrum in the near-infrared
and high emissivity in the mid-infrared for efficient radiative cooling.
These engineering challenges present an opportunity for nanophotonic
design. Here, we show that designed thin-film heterostructures could
become multifunctional building-block elements of the light sail,
due to their ability to achieve substantial reflectivity while maintaining
low absorption in the near-infrared, significant emissivity in the
mid-infrared, and a very low mass. For a light sail carrying a payload,
we propose a relevant figure of meritthe reflectivity adjusted
area densitythat can capture the trade-off between sail mass
and reflectivity, independent of other quantities such as the incident
beam power, phased array size, or the payload mass. Furthermore, we
present designs for effective thermal management via radiative cooling
and compare propulsion efficiencies for several candidate materials,
using a general approach that could apply to a broad range of high-power
laser propulsion problems
Color Imaging <i>via</i> Nearest Neighbor Hole Coupling in Plasmonic Color Filters Integrated onto a Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor Image Sensor
State-of-the-art CMOS imagers are composed of very small pixels, so it is critical for plasmonic imaging to understand the optical response of finite-size hole arrays and their coupling efficiency to CMOS image sensor pixels. Here, we demonstrate that the transmission spectra of finite-size hole arrays can be accurately described by only accounting for up to the second nearest-neighbor scattering-absorption interactions of hole pairs, thus making hole arrays appealing for close-packed color filters for imaging applications. Using this model, we find that the peak transmission efficiency of a square-shaped hole array with a triangular lattice reaches ∼90% that of an infinite array at an extent of ∼6 × 6 μm<sup>2</sup>, the smallest size array showing near-infinite array transmission properties. Finally, we experimentally validate our findings by investigating the transmission and imaging characteristics of a 360 × 320 pixel plasmonic color filter array composed of 5.6 × 5.6 μm<sup>2</sup> RGB color filters integrated onto a commercial black and white 1/2.8 in. CMOS image sensor, demonstrating full-color high resolution plasmonic imaging. Our results show good color fidelity with a 6-color-averaged color difference metric (Δ<i>E</i>) in the range of 16.6–19.3, after white balancing and color-matrix correcting raw images taken with f-numbers ranging from 1.8 to 16. The integrated peak filter transmission efficiencies are measured to be in the 50% range, with a FWHM of 200 nm for all three RGB filters, in good agreement with the spectral response of isolated unmounted color filters
Solar Cell Light Trapping beyond the Ray Optic Limit
In 1982, Yablonovitch proposed a thermodynamic limit
on light trapping
within homogeneous semiconductor slabs, which implied a minimum thickness
needed to fully absorb the solar spectrum. However, this limit is
valid for geometrical optics but not for a new generation of subwavelength
solar absorbers such as ultrathin or inhomogeneously structured cells,
wire-based cells, photonic crystal-based cells, and plasmonic cells.
Here we show that the key to exceeding the conventional ray optic
or so-called ergodic light trapping limit is in designing an elevated
local density of optical states (LDOS) for the absorber. Moreover,
for any semiconductor we show that it is always possible to exceed
the ray optic light trapping limit and use these principles to design
a number of new solar absorbers with the key feature of having an
elevated LDOS within the absorbing region of the device, opening new
avenues for solar cell design and cost reduction
DFT Study of Water Adsorption and Decomposition on a Ga-Rich GaP(001)(2×4) Surface
We investigate the adsorption and decomposition states
of a water
molecule on a Ga-rich GaP(001)(2×4) surface using the PBE flavor
of density functional theory (DFT). We selected the GaP(001)(2×4)
mixed dimer surface reconstruction model to represent the Ga-rich
GaP(001)(2×4) surface. Because our focus is on reactions between
a single water molecule and the surface, the surface water coverage
is kept at 0.125 ML, which corresponds to one water molecule in the
(2×4) unit cell. We report here the geometries and energies for
an exhaustive set of adsorption and decomposition states induced by
a water molecule on the (2×4) unit cell. Our results support
a mechanism in which (1) the first step is the <i>molecular adsorption</i>, with the water molecule forming a Lewis acid–Lewis base
bond to the sp<sup>2</sup> Ga atom of either the first-layer Ga–P
mixed dimer or the second layer Ga–Ga dimers using an addition
reaction, (2) which is followed by dissociation of the adsorbed H<sub>2</sub>O to form the <i>HO/H decomposition state</i> in
which the hydroxyl moiety bonds with surface sp<sup>2</sup> Ga atoms,
while the hydrogen moiety binds with the first-layer P atom, (3) which
is followed by the <i>O/2H decomposition state</i>, in which
the oxygen moiety forms bridged Ga–O–Ga structures with
surface Ga dimers while one H bonds with the first-layer P atom and
the other to surface sp<sup>2</sup> Ga atoms. (4) We find that driving
off the hydrogen as H<sub>2</sub> leads to the <i>surface oxide
state</i>, bridged Ga–O–Ga structures. This surface
oxide formation reaction is exothermic relative to the energy of H<sub>2</sub>O plus the reconstructed surface. These results provide guidelines
for experiments and theory to validate the key steps and to obtain
kinetics data for modeling the growth processes
Excitonic Effects in Emerging Photovoltaic Materials: A Case Study in Cu<sub>2</sub>O
Excitonic effects account for a fundamental
photoconversion and
charge transport mechanism in Cu<sub>2</sub>O; hence, the universally
adopted “free carrier” model substantially underestimates
the photovoltaic efficiency for such devices. The quasi-equilibrium
branching ratio between excitons and free carriers in Cu<sub>2</sub>O indicates that up to 28% of photogenerated carriers during photovoltaic
operation are excitons. These large exciton densities were directly
observed in photoluminescence and spectral response measurements.
The results of a device physics simulation using a model that includes
excitonic effects agree well with experimentally measured current–voltage
characteristics of Cu<sub>2</sub>O-based photovoltaics. In the case
of Cu<sub>2</sub>O, the free carrier model underestimates the efficiency
of a Cu<sub>2</sub>O solar cell by as much as 1.9 absolute percent
at room temperature
Design of Nanostructured Solar Cells Using Coupled Optical and Electrical Modeling
Nanostructured light trapping has emerged as a promising
route
toward improved efficiency in solar cells. We use coupled optical
and electrical modeling to guide optimization of such nanostructures.
We study thin-film n-i-p a-Si:H devices and demonstrate that nanostructures
can be tailored to minimize absorption in the doped a-Si:H, improving
carrier collection efficiency. This suggests a method for device optimization
in which optical design not only maximizes absorption, but also ensures
resulting carriers are efficiently collected
Profiling Photoinduced Carrier Generation in Semiconductor Microwire Arrays via Photoelectrochemical Metal Deposition
Au
was photoelectrochemically deposited onto cylindrical or tapered p-Si
microwires on Si substrates to profile the photoinduced charge-carrier
generation in individual wires in a photoactive semiconductor wire
array. Similar experiments were repeated for otherwise identical Si
microwires doped to be n-type. The metal plating profile was conformal
for n-type wires, but for p-type wires was a function of distance
from the substrate and was dependent on the illumination wavelength.
Spatially resolved charge-carrier generation profiles were computed
using full-wave electromagnetic simulations, and the localization
of the deposition at the p-type wire surfaces observed experimentally
correlated well with the regions of enhanced calculated carrier generation
in the volumes of the microwires. This technique could potentially be extended to
determine the spatially resolved carrier generation profiles in a
variety of mesostructured, photoactive semiconductors