Changing the color of light
MSEG-Doty_Group-Nanostructured_Materials - The UD research team aims to develop new nanostructures that act like a ratchet to combine the energy of two red photons of light into a single blue photon, which has higher energy. Such an advance could improve solar cell efficiency to chemotherapy treatments. |
Researchers at the University of Delaware have received a $1 million
grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation to explore a new idea that could
improve solar cells, medical imaging and even cancer treatments. Simply
put, they want to change the color of light.
They won’t be tinkering with what you see out your window: no purple
days or chartreuse nights, no edits to rainbows and blazing sunsets.
Their goal is to turn low-energy colors of light, such as red, into
higher-energy colors, like blue or green.
Changing the color of light would give solar technology a
considerable boost. A traditional solar cell can only absorb light with
energy above a certain threshold. Infrared light passes right through,
its energy untapped.
However, if that low-energy light could be transformed into
higher-energy light, a solar cell could absorb much more of the sun’s
clean, free, abundant energy. The team predicts that their novel
approach could increase the efficiency of commercial solar cells by 25
to 30 percent.
The research team, based in UD’s College of Engineering,
is led by Matthew Doty, associate professor of materials science and
engineering and associate director of UD’s Nanofabrication Facility.
Doty’s co-investigators include Joshua Zide, Diane Sellers and Chris
Kloxin, all in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering; and Emily Day and John Slater, both in the Department of Biomedical Engineering.
“This prestigious $1 million grant from the Keck Foundation
underscores the excellence and innovation of our University of Delaware
faculty,” says Nancy Targett, acting president of the University.
“Clearly, the University of Delaware is pursuing big ideas in renewable
energy and biomedicine with the potential to benefit the world.”
“The University’s Delaware Will Shine strategic plan challenges us to
think boldly as we seek solutions to problems facing society,” Domenico
Grasso, UD’s provost, adds. “We congratulate the research team in the
College of Engineering for this major award, and we look forward to
their findings.”
Changing the color of light
“A ray of light contains millions and millions of individual units of
light called photons,” says project leader Matthew Doty. “The energy of
each photon is directly related to the color of the light — a photon of
red light has less energy than a photon of blue light. You can’t simply
turn a red photon into a blue one, but you can combine the energy from
two or more red photons to make one blue photon.”
This process, called “photon upconversion,” isn’t new, Doty says. However, the UD team’s approach to it is.
They want to design a new kind of semiconductor nanostructure that
will act like a ratchet. It will absorb two red photons, one after the
other, to push an electron into an excited state when it can emit a
single high-energy (blue) photon.
These nanostructures will be so teeny they can only be viewed when
magnified a million times under a high-powered electron microscope.
“Think of the electrons in this structure as if they were at a water
park,” Doty says. “The first red photon has only enough energy to push
an electron half-way up the ladder of the water slide. The second red
photon pushes it the rest of the way up. Then the electron goes down the
slide, releasing all of that energy in a single process, with the
emission of the blue photon. The trick is to make sure the electron
doesn’t slip down the ladder before the second photon arrives. The
semiconductor ratchet structure is how we trap the electron in the
middle of the ladder until the second photon arrives to push it the rest
of the way up.”
The UD team will develop new semiconductor structures containing
multiple layers of different materials, such as aluminum arsenide and
gallium bismuth arsenide, each only a few nanometers thick. This
“tailored landscape” will control the flow of electrons into states with
varying potential energy, turning once-wasted photons into useful
energy.
The UD team has shown theoretically that their semiconductors could
reach an upconversion efficiency of 86 percent, which would be a vast
improvement over the 36 percent efficiency demonstrated by today’s best
materials. What’s more, Doty says, the amount of light absorbed and
energy emitted by the structures could be customized for a variety of
applications, from lightbulbs to laser-guided surgery.
How do you even begin to make structures so tiny they can only be
seen with an electron microscope? In one technique the UD team will use,
called molecular beam epitaxy, nanostructures will be built by
depositing layers of atoms one at a time. Each structure will be tested
to see how well it absorbs and emits light, and the results will be used
to tailor the structure to improve performance.
The researchers also will develop a milk-like solution filled with
millions of identical individual nanoparticles, each one containing
multiple layers of different materials. The multiple layers of this
structure, like multiple candy shells in an M&M, will implement the
photon ratchet idea. Through such work, the team envisions a future
upconversion “paint” that could be easily applied to solar cells,
windows and other commercial products.
Improving medical tests and treatments
While the initial focus of the three-year project will be on
improving solar energy harvesting, the team also will explore biomedical
applications.
A number of diagnostic tests and medical treatments, ranging from CT
and PET scans to chemotherapy, rely on the release of fluorescent dyes
and pharmaceutical drugs. Ideally, such payloads are delivered both at
specific disease sites and at specific times, but this is hard to
control in practice.
The UD team aims to develop an upconversion nanoparticle that can be
triggered by light to release its payload. The goal is to achieve the
controlled release of drug therapies even deep within diseased human
tissue while reducing the peripheral damage to normal tissue by
minimizing the laser power required.
“This is high-risk, high-reward research,” Doty says. “High-risk
because we don’t yet have proof-of-concept data. High-reward because it
has such a huge potential impact in renewable energy to medicine. It’s
amazing to think that this same technology could be used to harvest more
solar energy and to treat cancer. We’re excited to get started!”
About the W.M. Keck Foundation
Based in Los Angeles, the W.M. Keck Foundation was established in
1954 by the late W.M. Keck, founder of the Superior Oil Company. The
foundation’s grant making is focused primarily on pioneering efforts in
the areas of medical research, science and engineering, and
undergraduate education. The foundation also maintains a Southern
California Grant Program that provides support for the Los Angeles
community, with a special emphasis on children and youth. For more
information, visit the website.
About the University of Delaware
Tracing its heritage to 1743, UD is a state-assisted, privately
controlled institution with an enrollment of more than 22,000 students.
The University offers an extensive array of undergraduate and graduate
programs across seven colleges.
The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching classifies UD
as a research university with very high research activity — a
designation held by fewer than 3 percent of U.S. colleges and
universities. UD also is a 2015 recipient of the Carnegie Community
Engagement classification in recognition of its deep commitment to
public service.
Source : udel
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