Photonics Spectra BioPhotonics Vision Spectra Photonics Showcase Photonics Buyers' Guide Photonics Handbook Photonics Dictionary Newsletters Bookstore
Latest News Latest Products Features All Things Photonics Podcast
Marketplace Supplier Search Product Search Career Center
Webinars Photonics Media Virtual Events Industry Events Calendar
White Papers Videos Contribute an Article Suggest a Webinar Submit a Press Release Subscribe Advertise Become a Member


Highly Precise Gold Nanoantennas Produced

Physicists of the University of Würzburg have now produced tiny gold antennas that can capture sunlight with unheard of precision, which could lead to more efficient photovoltaic power generation.

Nanoantennas can — similarly to a burning lens, but much more efficient — collect light and concentrate it into tiny spaces. This allows a more efficient utilization of light energy. There are many applications for these optical antennas, ranging from photovoltaics to integrated circuits that work with light instead of electrons.


Smooth surfaces, sharp edges: An artist's rendition of a single-crystalline gold flake, from which several nanostructures were fabricated with a finely focused ion beam. In this way, Würzburg physicists have produced optical nanoantennas with a previously unheard of precision. These are recognizable as cubes arranged in pairs. One of the antennas in the foreground is excited by white light and lights up in the color of its resonant wavelength. The vapor-deposited gold layer to the left is significantly more coarse-grained. This previously used base material results in nanoantennas that are 10 times less efficient. (Image: Thorsten Feichtner)

However, the production of optical nanoantennas is quite tricky. "They need to be about 300 nm in length and include a gap, which is smaller than 10 nm — wherein the light is collected," said Bert Hecht professor at the Physics Department at the University of Würzburg. These are inconceivably small dimensions: One nanometer corresponds to one billionth of a meter. Unless fabricated at this scale, the antennas are not able to concentrate the light properly.

Why of all things is gold used as building material for the antennas? "This is because gold is chemically stable in air," said Hecht. You could also use silver, since it allows the production of optical antennas with even better characteristics. But silver is not stable in air: it corrodes.

"Previously, it was very difficult to manufacture nanoantennas from gold flawlessly with the required precision," he said. But now his Würzburg team, working in collaboration with researchers from Dübendorf (Switzerland) and Milan (Italy), has found a method which makes this feat possible. Initial examinations of the antennas show the great potential of the new method.

Previously, optical nanoantennas were produced as follows: Several metal layers were applied to a carrier substrate by means of vapor deposition. Just like in sculpture, the desired patterns could then be worked into this "blank."

The disadvantages of this method: The base layers consist of many small individual crystals, resulting in a grainy structure of these layers. If you try to cut out smooth structures with nanometer-scale features from such a "rough" layer, using a finely focused ion beam, irregular shapes are produced and the desired function is compromised.

Because of this, the team has taken a different approach. Via the method of chemical self-organization, they obtained gold flakes which consisted of one single gold crystal and hence were free from any internal granular structure. By means of ion beam milling, the researchers were able to fabricate nanostructures from these flakes, which are impressive in their precision: The cut edges are flat like one single layer of gold atoms.

Optical antennas produced in this way concentrate the light in their gaps 10 times better than conventional antennas. This new method now enables the researchers to create complex large-area structures reliably without any imperfections. "This is a big step towards the realization of future applications, such as the production of artificial light-harvesting complexes for photovoltaic systems or the development of integrated optical circuits," Hecht said.

Photovoltaics applications: still a long way to go

"We are still at the very beginning. First, we must fundamentally explore the potential of optical nanoantennas," he said. For this purpose, it is best to use gold as building material. However, even in the future, solar cells containing gold will certainly not be seen on our rooftops.

In the coming years, the Würzburg physicists are going to explore the potential of nanoantennas in a project funded by the Volkswagen Foundation (Hanover) under the program "Integration of Molecular Components in Functional Macroscopic Systems." Additional funds are provided by the German Research Foundation.

The results of this study are published in the online journal Nature Communications.

For more information, visit:  www.uni-wuerzburg.de/en 




Explore related content from Photonics Media




LATEST NEWS

Terms & Conditions Privacy Policy About Us Contact Us

©2024 Photonics Media