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Researchers Discover New Material to Help Power Electronics


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A research team at Ohio State University has discovered a way to simplify how electronic devices use electrons—using a material that can serve dual roles in electronics, where historically multiple materials have been necessary.

The team decribes its findings in "The Fermi Surface Geometrical Origin of Axis-Dependent Conduction Polarity in Layered Materials," published in the journal Nature Materials.

"We have essentially found a dual-personality material," says Joseph Heremans, co-author of the study, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and Ohio Eminent Scholar in Nanotechnology at Ohio State. "It is a concept that did not exist before."

Their findings could mean a revamp of the way engineers create different kinds of electronic devices. Those devices are the building blocks of everything from solar cells, to the light-emitting diodes in a television, to the transistors in a laptop, and to the light sensors in a smartphone camera.

Electronic devices are the building blocks of electricity: Each electron has a negative charge and can radiate or absorb energy depending on how it is manipulated. Holes—essentially, the absence of an electron—have a positive charge. Electronic devices work by moving electrons and holes—essentially conducting electricity.

But historically, each part of the electronic device could only act as electron-holder or a hole-holder, not both. That meant that electronics needed multiple layers—and multiple materials—to perform.

But the Ohio State researchers found a material—NaSn2As2, a crystal that can be both electron-holder and hole-holder—potentially eliminating the need for multiple layers.

"It is this dogma in science, that you have electrons or you have holes, but you don't have both. But our findings flip that upside down," says Wolfgang Windl, a professor of materials science and engineering at Ohio State, and co-author of the study. "And it's not that an electron becomes a hole, because it's the same assembly of particles. Here, if you look at the material one way, it looks like an electron, but if you look another way, it looks like a hole."

The finding could simplify electronics, perhaps creating more efficient systems that operate more quickly and break down less often.

Think of it like a Rube Goldberg machine, or the 1960s board game Mouse Trap: the more pieces at play and the more moving parts, the less efficiently energy travels throughout the system—and the more likely something is to fail.

"Now, we have this new family of layered crystals where the carriers behave like electrons when traveling within each layer, and holes when traveling through the layers. . . . You can imagine there might be some unique electronic devices you could create," says Joshua Goldberger, associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Ohio State, another author of the study.

The researchers name this dual-ability phenomenon "goniopolarity." They believe the material functions this way because of its unique electronic structure, and say it is probable that other layered materials could exhibit this property.

"We just haven't found them yet," Heremans says. "But now we know to search for them."

The researchers made the discovery almost by accident. A graduate student researcher in Heremans' lab, Bin He, another author of the study, was measuring the properties of the crystal when he noticed that the material behaved sometimes like an electron-holder and sometimes like a hole-holder—something that, at that point, science thought was impossible. He thought perhaps he had made an error, ran the experiment again and again, and got the same result.

"It was this thing that he paid attention and he didn't assume anything," Heremans says.

Bin He has since accepted a postdoctorate position at the Max Planck Institute in Dresden, Germany.

Additional authors of the Nature Materials article are Yaxian Wang, Maxx Q. Arguilla, Nicholas D. Cultrara, and Michael R. Scudder of Ohio State.

This work was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation.


 

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