Nanoscale rectenna for broadband rectification of light from infrared to visible
POSTER
Abstract
We describe a novel approach to the efficient collection and rectification of solar radiation in a device designed to operate from the infrared through the visible. Here, a nanoscale, rectenna array acts both as an absorber of incident radiation and as a rectifier. Rectification derives not from temperature or material asymmetry, as with metal-insulator-metal or silicon-based, Schottky diodes. Instead, it derives from the geometric asymmetry of the rectenna, which is composed of a pointed tip and a flat collector anode. In this arrangement, the difference between the potential barriers for forward and reverse bias results in a rectified dc current. To achieve anode-cathode gap distances within the tunneling regime, we employ selective atomic-layer deposition of copper applied to palladium rectenna arrays produced by electron-beam lithography. We present details of device fabrication and preliminary results of computer simulation, optical characterization, and electro-optical response.
Authors
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Darin Zimmerman
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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James Chen
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Michael Phillips
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Dennis Rager
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Zachary Sinisi
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Raymond Wambold
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Gary Weisel
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Brock Weiss
The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
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Brian Willis
The University of Connecticut, Storrs
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Nicholas Miskovsky
Scitech Associates, LLC