FiO/LS Day 2: Switching Into High Gear

By Patricia Daukantas

On Monday, OSA’s annual meeting, Frontiers in Optics (FiO), kicked into high gear with an excellent set of plenary talks, plus award ceremonies for both OSA and the American Physical Society (APS).

One of OSA’s young professional bloggers, Adam Zysk, paid special attention to the first half of the session. He mentioned OSA Honorary Member and Nobel laureate Roy Glauber’s childhood efforts to build a telescope -- which was one of the personal stories that inspired me to write an OPN feature article on amateur astronomy earlier this year.

Another one of our FiO bloggers, Bob Schoonover, covered the plenary talks by Andrea Ghez and Janos Kirz in a “live blogging” fashion. OPN Managing Editor Christina Folz did a lot of “tweeting” while Ghez was speaking -- to review her live updates, go to Twitter.com and follow @OPNmagazine.

By interviewing the Ives Medalist (with Quinn Endowment) Robert Byer on Sunday, I’d gotten a preview of his plenary talk, but I still enjoyed his complete lecture. Byer self-deprecatingly mentioned that in 1975 he had been “optimistic” that the total market for optical parametric oscillators would be about 50 units, but by today more than 10,000 of the devices had been sold. In 1988 he came out with “Byer’s version of Moore’s Law,” which stated that the cost of diode laser bars would drop to $1 per watt in 2004. That price was delayed for two years due to the telecom bust, but today diode bars cost roughly 10 cents per watt.

Byer, who has been at Stanford University (Palo Alto, Calif., U.S.A.) for four decades, said that one of California’s highlights of 2009 was the Northrop Grumman Space Technologies demonstration of a 105-kW laser in January 2009 (I reported on that from CLEO/IQEC in June). “One hundred kilowatts does a lot more than cut metal,” he quipped. Another bright spot in Silicon Valley is the Laser Electron Accelerator Project (LEAP), which will use photonic crystal accelerator structures to blast electrons with more energy than copper-based technology. Finally, California’s National Ignition Facility finished its 192 beamlines this year and could create a “sun” in the lab for 10 picoseconds one year from now.

Of course, laser fusion is not the only way in which optics is involved in the field of renewable energy. A Monday FiO session covered such topics as photosynthetic generation of biofuels and optimization of photovoltaic (PV) electricity generation.

Tasios Melis of the University of California at Berkeley (U.S.A.) presented his continuing experiments to increase light penetration into colonies of small plants that generate biofuels. Ray Kostiuk of the University of Arizona (U.S.A.) said a holographic planar concentrator (HPC) could reduce the amount of expensive PV material required for a typical building’s solar-power setup. The low-cost holographic gratings placed above the solar cells would allow for large collection angles without the need for tracking the Sun’s daily path through the sky. A team from the University of New Mexico (U.S.A.) is developing quantum-dots-in-a-well solar cells, which could lead to lightweight thin-film arrays that are at least as efficient as rigid solar panels.

Schoolteachers attending the OSA science education program on Thursday evening will receive solar-cell kits among other materials for middle and high school classrooms. OSA is offering three renewable-energy topical meetings next June, and our open-access journal, Optics Express, will start publishing periodic “Energy Express” sections next year (submissions deadline for the first one is coming up on December 15).

Late on Monday afternoon I succumbed to my natural interest in astrophysics and wandered into the joint FiO/Laser Science XXV special symposium on gravitational wave detection.

Jeff Livas of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (Greenbelt, Md., U.S.A.) talked about some of the technological challenges in designing the instruments for the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). NASA and the European Space Agency are jointly building a triangular space interferometer with an arm length of 5 million km, so noise reduction techniques will be crucial. The types of objects LISA will study include supermassive black-hole mergers, galactic close compact binaries, and extreme-mass-ratio in-spiraling objects (EMRIs), which could allow scientists to test general relativity to high precision.

Tuesday’s FiO schedule includes a special symposium on 3-D technology for the entertainment industry and the start of the topical meetings that constitute the OSA Fall Optics and Photonics Congress. Plus, our student members will bring their solar race cars back to the track for the final round of racing. Since it’s an overcast, rainy day in San Jose, it’s a good thing that the track is inside the exhibit hall!
 

Posted on October 13, 2009 22:55 by OPN

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Categories: 2009-10 October

Comments

10/15/2009 5:53:11 AM #

Hello,
I have seen the following sites:
http://ow.ly/ue5z
and the posting,
"FiO/LS Day 2: Switching Into High Gear"
www.osa-opn.org/.../...itching-Into-High-Gear.aspx
by Patricia Daukantas
A couple of omissions can be easily remedied -- It says,
"Of course, laser fusion is not the only way in which optics is involved in the field of renewable energy. A Monday FiO session covered such topics as photosynthetic generation of biofuels and optimization of photovoltaic (PV) electricity generation...Schoolteachers attending the OSA science education program on Thursday evening will receive solar-cell kits..."
The text seems to cover all the other talks in that session, but not the: Optics for Renewable Energy Keynote Speaker: FMB1, Optics of Solar Cells, Greg P. Smestad of Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells, USA,  and Sol Ideas Technology Development, USA, Monday, October 12, from 1:30 PM - 2:15 PM.  Abstract:
The performance of solar cells is determined by how its materials absorb, reflect and even emit light. The voltage produced can be described using the Planck equation rather than the Fermi-Dirac equation. In other words, solar conversion can be viewed from the standpoint of the photon rather than the electron. Such an engineering Systems Approach can be useful for understanding solar cell-device designs and the fundamental limitations to conversion efficiency. Likewise, a Systems Analysis for solar R&D can identify key positive reinforcements that can accelerate the adoption of solar technologies. It can identify constraints that can decelerate solar technology adoption, as well as points of leverage where investment and R&D can have the most positive impact. Key advances in solar concentrator and non-concentrator photovoltaic module optics will be reviewed within such a framework. Likewise, we present how the optics within the solar cell itself can maximize its solar conversion efficiency while reducing the $/Wp cost.
Download of the talk will be made available - It will eventually be found at: Optics InfoBase (www.opticsinfobase.org), OSA's digital library.  Also, solar cell kits will be demonstrated on Thursday and one lucky teacher will walk away with a full kit and supporting materials to teach the topic covered at Monday's Renewable energy session.  Details:  2009 OSA Science Educators Day Thursday, October 15, 2009, 5:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m. McCaw Hall, Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center, Stanford Univ. 326 Galvez St Stanford, California 94305 Tel.: +1 650.723.2021
Greg Smestad will demonstrate Solar Cell educational kits at this event: www.frontiersinoptics.com/.../default.aspx

Greg P. Smestad United States |

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