Close
15/02/2018
ICMAB traps sunlight with superabsorbent nanomaterials
In renewable energies, increasing efficiency is a key challenge in the production of “photovoltaic” electrons. This includes elaborating materials that can absorb the largest possible sunlight spectrum.
 
Great news from the Institute of Materials Science of Barcelona (ICMAB), a Barcelona Synchrotron Park’s partner: researchers led by Dr. Agustín Mihi, have created materials that largely absorb a wide range of the solar spectrum, between 400 and 1500 nm (visible light and infrared radiations), using an ultrathin layer of less than 100 nm thick of material.
 
The followed strategy, low cost and fully scalable, is based on combining the thin layer deposition of semiconductors on metals, and the nanostructuring of the material forming photonic crystals. The obtained superabsorbers materials have many potential applications, especially in the field of photovoltaic energy and photodetection.
 
Moreover, the researchers provide, in the study published in Advanced Materials, the design guidelines to synthesize other types of materials following the same strategy.
 

More news

15/10/2020 Parc de l'Alba in a WHO project 02/10/2020 The hydraulic barrier of Can Planas comes into operation 30/09/2020 SENER, the leading urban transport engineering company in Mexico 16/09/2020 Biogas injected into the natural gas grid: works begin! 23/07/2020 Catalan start-ups know how to attract funding 06/07/2020 The Barcelona Synchrotron Park joins the new WEDISTRICT EU program
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9