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Careening electrons may rev up solar cells.


In ordinary photovoltaic cells, lots of sunlight goes to waste as it heats up the cell. New results suggest that solar cells made from nanocrystals can trade this wasteful heating for an electricity-generating boost.

Theoretical calculations indicate that nanocrystal-based solar cells could convert 60 percent of sunlight into electricity, say Richard D. Schaller and Victor I. Klimov of Los Alamos Los Alamos (lôs ăl`əmōs', lŏs), uninc. town (1990 pop. 11,455), seat of Los Alamos co., N central N.Mex. It is on a long mesa extending from the Jemez Mts. The U.S.  (N.M.) National Laboratory. The best solar cells today operate at an efficiency of about 32 percent.

Schaller and Klimov describe their results, the first observations of a long-sought cue ball effect in nanometer-scale crystals, in an upcoming Physical Review Letters Physical Review Letters is one of the most prestigious journals in physics.[1] Since 1958, it has been published by the American Physical Society as an outgrowth of The Physical Review. .

The work is "an important scientific advance," says Arthur J. Nozik of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), located in Golden, Colorado, as part of the U.S. Department of Energy, is the United States' primary laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development.  in Golden, Colo. He was the first scientist to propose that nanocrystals, sometimes called quantum dots (SN: 3/6//04, p. 157), might exhibit the effect, called impact ionization ionization: see ion.
ionization

Process by which electrically neutral atoms or molecules are converted to electrically charged atoms or molecules (ions) by the removal or addition of negatively charged electrons.
.

Nozik leads a team that has sought the elusive effect for 6 years. Now, it appears that the Los Alamos researchers have reached the goal first. "We're kind of chagrined," Nozik admits.

In silicon or other semiconductor materials Semiconductor materials are insulators at absolute zero temperature that conduct electricity in a limited way at room temperature (see also Semiconductor). The defining property of a semiconductor material is that it can be doped with impurities that alter its electronic properties  typically used for solar cells, electrons require a minimum energy to break free from atoms and join an electric current. Most often, electrons get that energy kick from solar photons that pack more than that minimum energy.

The nanocrystal findings show that the outcome of the extra energy depends in part on the size of the crystal that absorbs an incoming photon, Klimov says.

Ordinary solar cells are often made from semiconductors in the size range of coins or playing cards playing cards, parts of a set or deck, used in playing various games of chance or skill. The origin of playing cards is unknown, and almost as many theories exist as there are historians of the subject. . In these cells, the leftover energy almost always creates heat via vibrations in the semiconductor's crystal lattice.

Schaller and Klimov worked instead with nanocrystals, about 5 nanometers in diameter, of the semiconductor compound lead selenide Sel´e`nide

n. 1. (Chem.) A binary compound of selenium, or a compound regarded as binary; as, ethyl selenide s>.
. They mixed a liquid with the crystals, each composed of a few thousand atoms, and sealed a drop in a small glass sheath. The researchers then shot laser pulses at a wide range of photon energies through the sheath to examine the nanocrystals' responses to light.

When those laser photons carried at least three times as much energy as required to knock an electron loose, impact ionization kicked in, the researchers found. The extra energy of each photon propelled a liberated electron like a cue ball so that it knocked one and sometimes two additional electrons free, making them available to join an electric current, Klimov says.

The finding might also open new ways for engineers to improve the performance of lasers and light-emitting diodes made from nanocrystals, comments Paul Mulvaney of the University of Melbourne
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Comments:

In 2006, Times Higher Education Supplement ranked the University of Melbourne 22nd in the world. Because of the drop in ranking, University of Melbourne is currently behind four Asian universities - Beijing University,
 in Australia.

Because of the large amount of energy needed to trigger impact ionization in lead-selenide particles and concerns about the toxicity of lead and selenium selenium (səlē`nēəm), nonmetallic chemical element; symbol Se; at. no. 34; at. wt. 78.96; m.p. 217°C;; b.p. about 685°C;; sp. gr. 4.81 at 20°C;; valence −2, +4, or +6. , scientists are now seeking other materials from which to make the nanocrystals.
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Title Annotation:Photon Double Whammy
Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Date:Apr 24, 2004
Words:475
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