Semiconductor nanowire building blocks: From flux line pinning to artificial photosynthesis

被引:0
|
作者
Peidong Yang
机构
[1] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Departments of Chemistry, and Materials Science and Engineering
来源
MRS Bulletin | 2012年 / 37卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Semiconductor nanowires, by definition, typically have nanoscale cross-sectional dimensions, with lengths spanning from hundreds of nanometers to millimeters. These subwavelength structures represent a new class of semiconductor materials for investigating light generation, propagation, detection, amplification, and modulation. After more than a decade of research, nanowires can now be synthesized and assembled with specific compositions, heterojunctions, and architectures. This has led to a host of nanowire photonic and electronic devices, including photodetectors, chemical and gas sensors, waveguides, LEDs, microcavity lasers, and nonlinear optical converters. Nanowires also represent an important class of nanostructure building blocks for photovoltaics as well as direct solar-to-fuel conversion because of their high surface area, tunable bandgap, and efficient charge transport and collection. This article gives a brief history of nanowire research for the past two decades and highlights several recent examples in our lab using semiconductor nanowires and their heterostructures for the purpose of solar energy harvesting and waste heat recovery.
引用
收藏
页码:806 / 813
页数:7
相关论文
共 16 条
  • [1] Semiconductor nanowire building blocks: From flux line pinning to artificial photosynthesis
    Yang, Peidong
    MRS BULLETIN, 2012, 37 (09) : 806 - 813
  • [2] Heterostructured semiconductor nanowire arrays for artificial photosynthesis
    Liu, Siqi
    Han, Chuang
    Tang, Zi-Rong
    Xu, Yi-Jun
    MATERIALS HORIZONS, 2016, 3 (04) : 270 - 282
  • [3] Logic gates and computation from assembled nanowire building blocks
    Huang, Y
    Duan, XF
    Cui, Y
    Lauhon, LJ
    Kim, KH
    Lieber, CM
    SCIENCE, 2001, 294 (5545) : 1313 - 1317
  • [4] An artificial active DNA transporter from biological building blocks
    Franceschini, Lorenzo
    Soskine, Misha
    Maglia, Giovanni
    JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS, 2013, 31 : 134 - 135
  • [5] Photodriven charge separation and transport in self-assembled donor-acceptor building blocks for artificial photosynthesis
    Bullock, Joseph E.
    Carmieli, Raanan
    Mickley, Sarah M.
    Vura-Weis, Josh
    Wasielewski, Michael R.
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2009, 238
  • [6] Building a bridge from solid wastes to solar fuels and chemicals via artificial photosynthesis
    Du, Mengmeng
    Xing, Mengyuan
    Kang, Sailei
    Ma, Yingxin
    Qiu, Bocheng
    Chai, Yang
    ECOMAT, 2022, 4 (06)
  • [7] Metallic nanowires from carbon nanotube building blocks: The effect of atomic defects on the nanotube influencing nanowire growth
    Panchapakesan, B
    Sivakumar, K
    Lu, SX
    ELECTRONIC AND PHOTONIC PACKAGING, ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS AND PHOTONIC DESIGN AND NANOTECHNOLOGY - 2003, 2003, : 193 - 201
  • [8] Skin bioprinting: a novel approach for creating artificial skin from synthetic and natural building blocks
    Augustine R.
    Progress in Biomaterials, 2018, 7 (2) : 77 - 92
  • [9] Off-Line Building Block Identification Detecting Building Blocks Directly from Fitness without Genetic Algorithms
    Lee, Hsuan
    Yu, Tian-Li
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE FOURTEENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GENETIC AND EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION CONFERENCE, 2012, : 641 - 648
  • [10] EQUIVALENT CIRCUITS FOR MULTISTRIP STRUCTURES DERIVED FROM TWO-LINE BUILDING BLOCKS.
    COSTAMAGNA, EUGENIO
    1982, V 51 (N 3): : 170 - 173