Vortex rectenna powered by environmental fluctuations

ORAL

Abstract

A rectenna, standing for a rectifying antenna, is an apparatus which generates d.c. electricity from electric fluctuations. It is expected to realize wireless power transmission as well as energy harvesting from environmental radio waves. To realize such rectification, devices that are made up of internal atomic asymmetry such as an asymmetric junction have been necessary so far. Here we report a material that spontaneously generates electricity by rectifying environmental fluctuations without using atomic asymmetry [Lustikova et al., Nat Commun (2018)]. The sample is a common superconductor without lowered crystalline symmetry, but, just by putting it in an asymmetric magnetic environment, it turns into a rectifier and starts generating electricity. Superconducting vortex strings only annihilate and nucleate at surfaces, and this allows the bulk electrons to feel surface fluctuations in an asymmetric environment: a vortex rectenna. The rectification and generation can be switched on and off with only a slight change in temperature or external magnetic fields.

Presenters

  • Jana Lustikova

    Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University, Tohoku University

Authors

  • Jana Lustikova

    Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University, Tohoku University

  • Yuki Shiomi

    Quantum-Phase Electronics Center, University of Tokyo, University of Tokyo

  • Naoto Yokoi

    Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University

  • Noriyuki Kabeya

    Center for Low Temperature Science, Tohoku University

  • Noriaki Kimura

    Center for Low Temperature Science, Tohoku University

  • Koichiro Ienaga

    Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology

  • Shin-ichi Kaneko

    Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology

  • Satoshi Okuma

    Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology

  • Saburo Takahashi

    Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University, Advanced Institute for Materials Research (AIMR), Tohoku University, Tohoku University

  • Eiji Saitoh

    Department of Applied Physics, University of Tokyo, University of Tokyo, Department of applied physics, University of Tokyo