Innovative diode design uses ultrafast quantum tunneling to harvest infrared energy from the environment

Phys org  February 5, 2018
Researchers in Saudi Arabia have designed a device, rectenna, that can tap into the infrared radiation in the environment and waste heat from industrial processes and transform quadrillionth-of-a-second wave signals into useful electricity. Tunneling devices, such as metal-insulator-metal (MIM) diodes, rectify infrared waves into current by moving electrons through a small barrier. They used a ‘bowtie-shaped’ nano-antenna that sandwiches the thin insulator film between two slightly overlapped metallic arms to generate the intense fields needed for tunneling… read more.

Overlapping metal arms shaped like a bowtie form a ‘rectenna’ that captures free, renewable infrared energy. Credit: Atif Shamim

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