Solar energy represents one of the most abundant and yet least harvested sources of renewable energy. In recent years, tremendous progress has been made in developing photovoltaics that can be potentially mass deployed. Of particular interest to cost-effective solar cells is to use novel device structures and materials processing for enabling acceptable efficiencies. In this regard, here, we report the direct growth of highly regular, single-crystalline nanopillar arrays of optically active semiconductors on aluminium substrates that are then configured as solar-cell modules. As an example, we demonstrate a photovoltaic structure that incorporates three-dimensional, single-crystalline n-CdS nanopillars, embedded in polycrystalline thin films of p-CdTe, to enable high absorption of light and efficient collection of the carriers. Through experiments and modelling, we demonstrate the potency of this approach for enabling highly versatile solar modules on both rigid and flexible substrates with enhanced carrier collection efficiency arising from the geometric configuration of the nanopillars.
Controlled and uniform assembly of "bottom-up" nanowire (NW) materials with high scalability presents one of the significant bottleneck challenges facing the integration of nanowires for electronic applications. Here, we demonstrate wafer-scale assembly of highly ordered, dense, and regular arrays of NWs with high uniformity and reproducibility through a simple contact printing process. The assembled NW pitch is shown to be readily modulated through the surface chemical treatment of the receiver substrate, with the highest density approaching approximately 8 NW/mum, approximately 95% directional alignment, and wafer-scale uniformity. Such fine control in the assembly is attained by applying a lubricant during the contact printing process which significantly minimizes the NW-NW mechanical interactions, therefore enabling well-controlled transfer of nanowires through surface chemical binding interactions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that our printing approach enables large-scale integration of NW arrays for various device structures on both rigid silicon and flexible plastic substrates, with a controlled semiconductor channel width ranging from a single NW ( approximately 10 nm) up to approximately 250 microm, consisting of a parallel array of over 1250 NWs and delivering over 1 mA of ON current.
We report large-scale integration of nanowires for heterogeneous, multifunctional circuitry that utilizes both the sensory and electronic functionalities of single crystalline nanomaterials. Highly ordered and parallel arrays of optically active CdSe nanowires and high-mobility Ge/Si nanowires are deterministically positioned on substrates, and configured as photodiodes and transistors, respectively. The nanowire sensors and electronic devices are then interfaced to enable an all-nanowire circuitry with on-chip integration, capable of detecting and amplifying an optical signal with high sensitivity and precision. Notably, the process is highly reproducible and scalable with a yield of Ϸ80% functional circuits, therefore, enabling the fabrication of large arrays (i.e., 13 ؋ 20) of nanowire photosensor circuitry with image-sensing functionality. The ability to interface nanowire sensors with integrated electronics on large scales and with high uniformity presents an important advance toward the integration of nanomaterials for sensor applications.nanomaterials ͉ printable electronics ͉ devices ͉ transistors ͉ imager C hemically derived, synthetic nanomaterials with low dimensionality and well defined atomic composition present a unique route toward miniaturization of electronic and sensor components while enhancing their performance and functionality (1-5). To date, a broad spectrum of single crystalline nanomaterials with tailored properties have been synthesized, and have been successfully demonstrated as the building blocks of various high-performance device elements, such as transistors (6 -17), optical devices (18 -20), sensors (21-26), energyscavenging devices (27), and simple circuit structures (7,17,19,28). These synthetic materials present a number of key advantages over their bulk counterparts. For instance, downscaling of the active sensing material to the nanoscale regime has been shown to enhance the sensitivity of chemical, biological, and optical sensors by orders of magnitude (21-26). To enable the implementation of nanosensors for various technological applications, on-chip integration with electronics is needed to enable automated and accurate processing of the signal. Here, we demonstrate an all-integrated, heterogeneous nanowire (NW) circuitry, capable of detecting and amplifying an optical signal with high sensitivity and responsivity. By implementing our recently developed contact printing technology (29, 30), large arrays of optically active CdSe NWs and high-mobility core/shell Ge/Si NWs are assembled at well defined locations on substrates, and configured as integrated sensor and electronic active components of an all-nanowire circuitry with image-sensing capability. Results and DiscussionIn this work, direct band gap CdSe NWs were used as a model system for the optical sensor elements, capable of detecting visible light with high sensitivity. CdSe-and CdS-based nanomaterials such as quantum dots and NWs have been extensively explored in the past, and their superb optical and opto-electric...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.