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Scalable micro-fabricated ion traps for Quantum Information Processing

Maunz, Peter L.; Benito, Francisco M.; Berry, Christopher W.; Blain, Matthew G.; Haltli, Raymond A.; Clark, Craig R.; Clark, Susan M.; Heller, Edwin J.; Hollowell, Andrew E.; Mizrahi, Jonathan M.; Nordquist, Christopher N.; Resnick, Paul J.; Rembetski, John F.; Scrymgeour, David S.; Sterk, Jonathan D.; Tabakov, Boyan T.; Tigges, Chris P.; Van Der Wall, Jay W.; Dagel, Amber L.

Abstract not provided.

Cost analysis of flat-plate concentrators employing microscale photovoltaic cells for high energy per unit area applications

2014 IEEE 40th Photovoltaic Specialist Conference, PVSC 2014

Paap, Scott; Gupta, Vipin P.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Resnick, Paul J.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Nielson, Gregory N.; Cruz-Campa, Jose L.; Jared, Bradley H.; Nelson, Jeffrey; Okandan, Murat O.; Sweatt, W.C.

Microsystems Enabled Photovoltaics (MEPV) is a relatively new field that uses microsystems tools and manufacturing techniques familiar to the semiconductor industry to produce microscale photovoltaic cells. The miniaturization of these PV cells creates new possibilities in system designs that can be used to reduce costs, enhance functionality, improve reliability, or some combination of all three. In this article, we introduce analytical tools and techniques to estimate the costs associated with a hybrid concentrating photovoltaic system that uses multi-junction microscale photovoltaic cells and miniaturized concentrating optics for harnessing direct sunlight, and an active c-Si substrate for collecting diffuse sunlight. The overall model comprises components representing costs and profit margin associated with the PV cells, concentrating optics, balance of systems, installation, and operation. This article concludes with an analysis of the component costs with particular emphasis on the microscale PV cell costs and the associated tradeoffs between cost and performance for the hybrid CPV design.

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Development of MEMS photoacoustic spectroscopy

Eichenfield, Matthew S.; Givler, R.C.; Pfeifer, Kent B.; Reinke, Charles M.; Robinson, Alex L.; Resnick, Paul J.; Griffin, Benjamin G.; Langlois, Eric L.; Nielson, Gregory N.; Okandan, Murat O.

After years in the field, many materials suffer degradation, off-gassing, and chemical changes causing build-up of measurable chemical atmospheres. Stand-alone embedded chemical sensors are typically limited in specificity, require electrical lines, and/or calibration drift makes data reliability questionable. Along with size, these "Achilles' heels" have prevented incorporation of gas sensing into sealed, hazardous locations which would highly benefit from in-situ analysis. We report on development of an all-optical, mid-IR, fiber-optic based MEMS Photoacoustic Spectroscopy solution to address these limitations. Concurrent modeling and computational simulation are used to guide hardware design and implementation.

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Failure analysis techniques for microsystems-enabled photovoltaics

IEEE Journal of Photovoltaics

Yang, Benjamin B.; Cruz-Campa, Jose L.; Haase, Gad S.; Cole, Edward I.; Tangyunyong, Paiboon T.; Resnick, Paul J.; Kilgo, Alice C.; Okandan, Murat O.; Nielson, Gregory N.

Microsystems-enabled photovoltaics (MEPV) has great potential to meet the increasing demands for light-weight, photovoltaic solutions with high power density and efficiency. This paper describes effective failure analysis techniques to localize and characterize nonfunctional or underperforming MEPV cells. The defect localization methods such as electroluminescence under forward and reverse bias, as well as optical beam induced current using wavelengths above and below the device band gap, are presented. The current results also show that the MEPV has good resilience against degradation caused by reverse bias stresses. © 2013 IEEE.

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Flat plate concentrators with large acceptance angle enabled by micro cells and mini lenses: performance evaluation

Cruz-Campa, Jose L.; Anderson, Benjamin J.; Gupta, Vipin P.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Cederberg, Jeffrey G.; Paap, Scott M.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Nordquist, Christopher N.; Nielson, Gregory N.; Saavedra, Michael P.; Ballance, Mark H.; Nguyen, Janet N.; Alford, Charles A.; Riley, Daniel R.; Okandan, Murat O.; Lentine, Anthony L.; Sweatt, W.C.; Jared, Bradley H.; Resnick, Paul J.; Kratochvil, Jay A.

Abstract not provided.

Sandia Micro-fabricated Ion Traps for the MUSIQC architecture

Maunz, Peter L.; Heller, Edwin J.; Hollowell, Andrew E.; Kemme, S.A.; Loviza, Becky G.; Mizrahi, Jonathan A.; Ortega, Anathea C.; Scrymgeour, David S.; Sterk, Jonathan D.; Tigges, Chris P.; Dagel, Amber L.; Clark, Craig R.; Stick, Daniel L.; Blain, Matthew G.; Clark, Susan M.; Resnick, Paul J.; Arrington, Christian L.; Benito, Francisco M.; Boye, Robert B.; Ellis, A.R.; Haltli, Raymond A.

Abstract not provided.

Advanced compound semiconductor and silicon fabrication techniques for next-generation solar power systems

ECS Transactions

Nielson, Gregory N.; Okandan, Murat O.; Cruz-Campa, Jose L.; Gupta, Vipin P.; Resnick, Paul J.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Paap, Scott M.; Kim, B.; Sweatt, W.C.; Lentine, Anthony L.; Cederberg, Jeffrey G.; Tauke-Pedretti, Anna; Jared, B.H.; Anderson, Benjamin J.; Biefeld, Robert M.; Nelson, J.S.

Microsystem technologies have the potential to significantly improve the performance, reduce the cost, and extend the capabilities of solar power systems. These benefits are possible due to a number of significant beneficial scaling effects within solar cells, modules, and systems that are manifested as the size of solar cells decrease to the sub-millimeter range. To exploit these benefits, we are using advanced fabrication techniques to create solar cells from a variety of compound semiconductors and silicon that have lateral dimensions of 250 - 1000 μm and are 1 - 20 μm thick. These fabrication techniques come out of relatively mature microsystem technologies such as integrated circuits (IC) and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) which provide added supply chain and scale-up benefits compared to even incumbent PV technologies. © The Electrochemical Society.

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Fabrication of lattice mismatched multijunction photovoltaic cells using 3D integration concepts

Conference Record of the IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference

Cruz-Campa, Jose L.; Nielson, Gregory N.; Lentine, Anthony L.; Filatov, Anton A.; Resnick, Paul J.; Sanchez, Carlos A.; Rowen, Adam M.; Okandan, Murat O.; Gupta, Vipin P.; Nelson, Jeffrey S.

We present the experimental procedure to create lattice mismatched multijunction photovoltaic (PV) cells using 3D integration concepts. Lattice mismatched multijunction photovoltaic (PV) cells with decoupled electrical outputs could achieve higher efficiencies than current-matched monolithic devices. Growing lattice mismatched materials as a monolithic structure generates defects and decreases performance. We propose using methods from the integrated circuits and microsystems arena to produce the PV cell. The fabricated device consists of an ultrathin (6 μm) series connected InGaP/GaAs PV cell mechanically stacked on top of an electrically independent silicon cell. The InGaP/GaAs PV cell was processed to produce a small cell (750 μm) with back-contacts where all of the contacts sit at the same level. The dual junction and the silicon (c-Si) cell are electrically decoupled and the power from both cells is accessible through pads on the c-Si PV cell. Through this approach, we were able to fabricate a functional double junction PV cell mechanically attached to a c-Si PV cell with independent connections. © 2012 IEEE.

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Results 26–50 of 83
Results 26–50 of 83