Thursday, February 14, 2013

A cooler way to protect silicon surfaces

Feb. 13, 2013 ? New room-temperature process could lead to less expensive solar cells and other electronic devices.

Silicon, the material of high-tech devices from computer chips to solar cells, requires a surface coating before use in these applications. The coating "passivates" the material, tying up loose atomic bonds to prevent oxidation that would ruin its electrical properties. But this passivation process consumes a lot of heat and energy, making it costly and limiting the kinds of materials that can be added to the devices.

Now a team of MIT researchers has found a way to passivate silicon at room temperature, which could be a significant boon to solar-cell production and other silicon-based technologies.

The research, by graduate student Rong Yang and engineering professors Karen Gleason and Tonio Buonassisi, was recently published online in the journal Advanced Materials.

Typically, silicon surfaces are passivated with a coating of silicon nitride, which requires heating a device to 400 degrees Celsius, explains Gleason, the Alexander and I. Michael Kasser Professor of Chemical Engineering. By contrast, the process Gleason's team uses decomposes organic vapors over wires heated to 300 C, but the silicon itself never goes above 20 C -- room temperature. Heating those wires requires much less power than illuminating an ordinary light bulb, so the energy costs of the process are quite low.

Conventional silicon-nitride passivation "is one of the more expensive parts, and one of the more finicky parts, in the processing" of silicon for solar cells and other uses, says Buonassisi, an associate professor of mechanical engineering, "so replacing part of silicon nitride's functionality with a simplified, robust organic layer has the potential to be a big win."

Essential process

Passivation is essential: Without it, silicon's surface is oxidized as soon as it's exposed to air, impeding its performance as a solar cell. "It would oxidize within minutes," Yang says. By contrast, the MIT team has tested silicon chips with the new polymer coating in place for more than 200 hours, observing no degradation at all in performance. "The electrical properties did not change," she says.

The low temperature of the silicon chip in this process means that it could be combined with other materials, such as organic compounds or polymers, that would be destroyed by the higher temperature of the conventional coating process. This could enable new applications of silicon chips -- for example, as biosensors following bonding with compounds that react with specific biological molecules. "People have grafted DNA and protein antibodies to silicon," Yang notes.

Saving energy

The energy used in manufacturing silicon solar cells is a critical concern because every bit of cost savings helps to make them more competitive with other sources of electricity. The lower temperatures could significantly reduce manufacturing costs, the MIT researchers say.

The new process also has an added benefit, providing an anti-reflective coating that improves a solar cell's overall efficiency, the team says.

Both the conventional process and the new process take place in a vacuum chamber. Liquid reactants evaporate, then adsorb and react on the surface. The adsorption step is much the same as mist forming on a cold bathroom window after you take a shower.

The process can easily be scaled to the size of conventional solar cells, Gleason says. Additionally, the materials involved are all commercially available, so implementing the new method for commercial production could be a relatively quick process.

Buonassisi describes lowering the cost of manufacturing equipment, including that used to apply the passivating and antireflection coating, as "one of the three steps that's needed to drive down the price of solar modules to widespread grid competitiveness." (The other two are improvements in efficiency and reducing the amount of materials used.) The next step for his team is to scale up the process from laboratory-scale to production levels that could lead to commercialization, he says.

The challenge in making this advance, he explains, was found at the atomic level -- specifically, at the interface between the organic coating material and the silicon, to ensure that the two bonded solidly. Tests have shown that the process this team developed has solved that challenge, Buonassisi says. While the team used one specific polymer for the coating, the process could be replicated using other organic materials.

The research was supported by the Italian energy company Eni S.p.A., under the Eni-MIT Alliance Solar Frontiers Program.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The original article was written by David L. Chandler.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Rong Yang, Tonio Buonassisi, Karen K. Gleason. Organic Vapor Passivation of Silicon at Room Temperature. Advanced Materials, 2013; DOI: 10.1002/adma.201204382

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/i7YbhaQsZhE/130213132423.htm

Steelers Schedule tory burch Al Smith Dinner Herman Melville Books Kyna Treacy megan fox Bb&t

Bloomberg's latest target: Styrofoam

Bloomberg at a press conference earlier this month (Mario Tama/Getty Images)NEW YORK? New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has banned smoking at restaurants, bars and parks, put limits on the sales of sugary sodas and required fast food eateries to post the fat and calorie totals of the meals they serve.

And now, as he enters his final months in office, Bloomberg is looking to institute another sweeping citywide ban, this time on plastic-foam packaging used for coffee cups and food containers.

Bloomberg will make the proposal in his final State of the City address on Thursday.

?We can live without it, we may live longer without it, and the doggie bag will survive just fine,? Bloomberg will say, according to excerpts obtained by the New York Times.

A spokesman for the mayor did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Yahoo News.

Bloomberg?s push comes after several other major cities?including San Francisco, Seattle and Portland, Ore.?have passed similar bans on plastic-foam packaging?which is more expensive to recycle and is considered harmful to the environment.

Rumors that Bloomberg would push for a plastic-foam ban have been rampant for weeks at City Hall. The ban would require approval from the City Council if it is to be implemented.

The proposal is likely to face considerable pushback from the city?s restaurant and convenience store industries?which are already angsty about a citywide ban on sales of cups of soda larger than 16 ounces set. That regulation is set to go into effect Mar. 1. (Diet soda is exempted.)

According to the Times, Bloomberg will also outline a plan to put more recycling bins on New York City streets.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/bloomberg-push-ban-plastic-foam-packaging-052641304--politics.html

taco bell Breezy Point Seaside Heights nj transit PSEG hocus pocus hocus pocus

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Women's Health USA - March 2013 (HQ PDF) Download All You ...



Women's Health USA - March 2013
English | 160 pages | HQ PDF | 109.00 Mb


Women's Health is the must-read magazine for women who want to live life to its fullest. Every issue of the magazine is a manual to better, healthier living in two key respects?physically and emotionally. Women?s Health magazine is your source of information on fitness, nutrition, sex and relationships, style, beauty and more. With success strategies, fitness tips and fashion and career advice, the magazine encourages readers to take charge and conquer all aspects of life. Each issue has something different to offer, such as healthy, delicious recipes and fun weekend activity ideas. Edited for a well-rounded readership, Women?s Health focuses on providing realistic goals and covering the issues most relevant to today?s modern woman.
...== > Purchase premium accounts
in order to enjoy unlimited downloads with resuming support


http://rapidgator.net/file/76551039/Women's_Health_USA_2013-03.pdf.html
or
http://ryushare.com/2l9iaul5o8nf/Women's_Health_USA_2013-03.pdf


Bookmark

Most file sharing sites (eg: Uploaded, Rapidgator, Depositfiles, Turbobit, Netload, Letitbit, Extabit, bitshare, Zippyshare & Putlocker ) offer you a Free download and Paid download option. These sites are excellent sources for Women's Health USA - March 2013 (HQ PDF) Free Download Torrent.



Source: http://www.heroturko.me/magazine/man-woman/3227533-womens-health-usa-march-2013-hq-pdf.html

blade runner close encounters of the third kind beyonce and jay z baby droid 4 tom brady sister dad shoots daughters laptop brandon jennings

Friday, February 1, 2013

UCF Women's Tennis Suffers Loss at No. 1 Florida

Jan. 30, 2013

Final Stats

Twitter LogoFacebook LogoUCF Athletics Social Media Directory

By Brian Ormiston
UCFAthletics.com

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UCFAthletics.com) - In its first road match of the season, the UCF women's tennis team dropped a 7-0 decision at No. 1 Florida Wednesday. The loss was the Knights' first of the year as they fell to 2-1, while the Gators improved to 2-0.

Having already posted wins together against teams like Marquette and Florida State in 2012-13, UCF's top doubles pair of Genevieve Lorbergs and Josephine Haraldson continued to shine in Gainesville. Entering the day with a three-match winning streak, the duo stretched it to four by cruising past Florida's No. 1 doubles team of Danielle Collins and Olivia Janowicz, 8-3. Collins ranks No. 22 in the nation in singles, while Janowicz sits at No. 114.

The victory by Lorbergs and Haraldson boosted their overall record to 10-5 dating back to their first match of the season in September. Even though UCF had a 1-0 lead in doubles against the Gators, the home team picked up wins at No. 2 and No. 3 to take the doubles point.

Florida would go on to collect six victories in singles action. Lorbergs had the toughest challenge of the day by facing the country's top-ranked player in Sofie Oyen. The UCF senior stayed step for step with Oyen in the first set, but could not record the upset, 7-5, 6-3.

The Knights will stay on the road for their next outing, as they will tangle with Florida Atlantic in Boca Raton Saturday at 11 a.m.

Tennis Match Results UCF vs Florida Jan 30, 2013 at Gainesville, Fla. 

#1 Florida 7, UCF 0

Singles competition 1. #1 Sofie Oyen (UF) def. Genevieve Lorbergs (UCF) 7-5, 6-3 2. Alexandra Cercone (UF) def. Jenna Doerfler (UCF) 6-2, 6-2 3. #22 Danielle Collins (UF) def. Josephine Haraldson (UCF) 6-0, 6-0 4. #114 Olivia Janowicz (UF) def. Caroline Eberhart (UCF) 6-3, 6-2 5. #66 Brianna Morgan (UF) def. Sofia Baptista (UCF) 6-1, 6-1 6. #82 Caroline Hitimana (UF) def. Clare Mendell (UCF) 6-3, 6-2

Doubles competition 1. Genevieve Lorbergs/Josephine Haraldson (UCF) def. Danielle Collins/Olivia Janowicz (UF) 8-3 2. Sofie Oyen/Caroline Hitimana (UF) def. Caroline Eberhart/Courtney Griffith (UCF) 8-4 3. Alexandra Cercone/Brianna Morgan (UF) def. Sofia Baptista/Jenna Doerfler (UCF) 8-3

Match Notes: UCF 2-1 Florida 2-0; National ranking #1

?

?


Source: http://onlyfans.cstv.com/schools/ucf/sports/w-tennis/recaps/013013aaa.html

Australian Open Girls Hbo adele homeland homeland Golden Globes Miss America 2013