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October 4, 2010 - Volume 88, Number 40
- p. 34
- DOI:10.1021/CEN093010164915
Science & Technology Concentrates
More Science & Technology Concentrates
- One Mouth Microbe Regulates Another
- Mutanobactin A made by one bacterium inhibits the growth of another microorganism—in people
- Polymer Sustainability Metrics Compared
- Biopolymers rank high for green design, but petroleum-based polyolefins rank higher in overall life-cycle assessments
- Ultrasound makes big Crystals of Mercury Thiolates
- Sonicating liquid mercury-alkanethiol mixtures leads to large, high-quality crystals of electronics chemicals
- Solar Cell Captures Multiple Excitations
- Quantum-dot-based system converts high-energy photons into multiple electrons to boost photovoltaic efficiency
- Free Heme Promotes Severe Sepsis
- Blood's iron-toting compound heme is key to the body's systemic inflammatory response to an infection
- Shifty Manipulation Of Microdroplets
- Microfluidic device allows easy formation, storage, and retrieval of water droplets for biomedical applications
- 'Artificial Leaf' Produces Electricity
- A water-based gel impregnated with photosensitive molecules serves as a new type of biomimetic solar cell
- New Simple CO2 Sensor
- Analytical Techniques: Easy-to-read chemosensor requires little power and does not pick up signals from other gases
Topics Covered
Quantum dots, a class of semiconductor nanocrystals, can serve as the basis of an efficient photovoltaic system for exploiting high-energy light’s propensity for generating multiple electronic excitations, according to a report (Science 2010, 330, 63). As photons with a minimum characteristic energy impinge on a semiconductor, they stimulate electronic excitations, which lead to electron-hole pairs and trigger the process that generates a current. Photons in the high-energy portion of the solar spectrum can generate multiple excitations, which in principle could lead to enhanced electrical output. The excess energy, however, is generally lost as heat. Justin B. Sambur and Bruce A. Parkinson of the University of Wyoming and Thomas Novet of optoelectronics maker Voxtel, in Beaverton, Ore., prepared a photovoltaic device by first coating lead sulfide quantum dots with a passivating layer of mercaptopropionic acid and then attaching the quantum dots to a titanium dioxide crystal via thiolate and carboxylic acid units. That setup, in which the PbS and TiO2 energy levels are favorably aligned, enabled the team to measure a quantum yield—the ratio of photons in to electrons out—greater than one, signifying multiple electron excitations.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
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