New optical antennas harvest 100 times more electricity from heat
27 May 2021 | 19:37 GMT
The world's most efficient optical rectennas yet can harvest over 100 times more energy from waste heat compared to previous devices, although a new study finds that much work is needed before they can achieve practical value.
Rectennas—short for "rectifying antennas"—pick up electromagnetic waves much like car antennas. When a rectenna’s antenna receives a signal, it generates oscillating charges that move through attached rectifier diodes. These rectifiers then convert these fluctuations to a direct electric current.
In theory, rectennas could harvest energy from heat that would ordinarily go to waste. "It would be great if these could help out with climate change," says study lead author Amina Belkadi, an electrical engineer at the University of Colorado at Boulder. "You could imagine adding them to solar cells so you can get even more energy from them."
However, the conversion efficiency of optical rectennas has proven far too low to make them useful for such applications. The problem is that in order to capture thermal radiation, rectennas have to be extraordinarily tiny, but the smaller they are, the more their resistance grows, which can shrink their power output.
Now Belkadi and her colleagues have found a way to dramatically boost optical rectenna efficiency using a quantum effect roughly equivalent to electrons walking through walls.
https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/ene ... l-rectenna
