UPTON,
NY -- Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's
Brookhaven National Laboratory and the University
of Florida have uncovered information that may help
"molecular wires" replace silicon in micro-electronic
circuits and/or components in solar energy storage
systems. The scientists were studying how electric
charge is distributed in polymer molecule chains that
are several nanometers, or billionths of a meter,
in length.
Brookhaven chemist John Miller, the study's lead scientist,
will present the group's results on Sunday, August
22, 2004, at the 228th national meeting of the American
Chemical Society in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania
Convention Center, Ballroom B, 2:45 p.m.).
"Long molecules that can act as molecular wires,
of which there are many variations, are one type of
nanoscale object with the potential to lead to new
technologies, due to their ability to conduct electricity
and very small size," said Miller. "But
unlike conventional metal wires, polymer nanowires
need assistance in order to conduct."
"Using a cluster of high-energy electrons from
an accelerator, we can quickly add an extra negative
or positive charge to a polymer molecular wire. When
the end of the wire contains a chemically-attached
'trap' molecule, one where the electrons will be at
a lower, more stable energy, the charge moves to it.
This allows us to 'see' that the wires conduct electrons
quickly, and over long distances."
One potential application for this finding is in the
solar energy industry, particularly in a new field
called "plastic solar." In conventional
solar cells, incoming solar energy is transferred
to the electrons in a semiconducting material, such
as silicon, which knocks many of them loose. These
electrons are guided to an electrode, creating a current
that can be drawn off and used.
The plastic solar movement aims to replace materials
like silicon with polymer nanowires, which are cheaper
and lighter. Another advantage of plastic solar cells
is their physical versatility. Due to the flexible,
bendable nature of polymer materials, plastic solar
cells could be placed in areas of greatly varying
size and surface type. Conventional cells are rigid
and costly, and the current production method limits
their size.
In plastic solar cells constructed to date, electrons
must jump from one polymer wire to another in order
to reach the electrodes. But as the electrons leave
one wire in order to jump to the next, they encounter
barriers, which require larger amounts of energy to
traverse than the barriers that hinder electron movement
within typical nanowires. This slows down the electrons.
Miller and his collaborators want to learn how to
eliminate the barriers. But first, they must understand
how the electrons move within single polymer wires
-- the amount of energy the electrons need, for example.
Later, this information can be used to choose the
best polymer conductors and design structures for
plastic solar cells.
The group observed electrons move down a polymer wire
by immersing the wire in an organic fluid and shooting
high-energy electrons through the fluid. The electrons
were supplied by Brookhaven's Laser-Electron Accelerator
Facility (LEAF), which accelerates electrons to high
energies for research applications. The energetic
LEAF electrons either kick away some of the fluid
molecules' electrons or allow the molecules to give
up "holes" -- mobile, empty spaces that
carry positive charge. As a result, the submerged
nanowire receives one of these electrons or holes.
"This new method injects extra negative or positive
charges into the wires and allows us to observe the
charges quickly diffuse across it. This observation
is a key step toward developing polymer nanowires
that are good conductors," Miller said.
In the future, Miller and his group also plan to look
for ways to increase the conduction efficiency of
the wires.
This research was funded by the Office of Basic Energy
Sciences within the U.S. Department of Energy's Office
of Science. It was performed in collaboration with
Alison Funston and Norihiko Takeda (Brookhaven Lab),
and Kirk Schanze and Eric Silverman (University of
Florida).
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Contact:
Karen McNulty Walsh
kmcnulty@bnl.gov
631-344-8350
DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory