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BAE Systems Sensor Solutions - Fairchild - Thermal Imaging Solutions 4/24 LB

Antennas Capture, Upconvert Weak IR Light

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GRONINGEN, the Netherlands, July 17, 2012 — A technique that uses special molecules as light antennas to harvest the energy from weak infrared light has been found to amplify the process 3300 times and could lead to improved solar cells and medical imaging techniques. Materials scientists and chemists from the University of Groningen and from the FOM Foundation harvested infrared light — which has too little energy to release electrons in solar cells — more efficiently by modifying an organic dye that acts as light antennas to transmit the energy to the nanoparticles to which they are attached. These particles...Read full article

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    Published: July 2012
    Basic ScienceBiophotonicsenergyEuropeFOM Foundationgreengreen energygreen photonicsImaginginfrared lightinfrared light harvestingKees Hummelenlight antennaslight harvestingmedical imagingnanocrystalsNetherlandsphotonsphotovoltaicsResearch & TechnologyShockley-Queisser efficiency limitsolar cellsUniversity of Groningenupconversionvisible lightweak infrared light

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