posted on 2023-02-09, 15:10authored byMengdi Sun, Pooria Golvari, Stephen Michael Kuebler, Pieter G. Kik
The intrinsic trade-off between conductivity
and transparency has
long impeded the development of truly transparent electrodes. Recently,
a transparent electrode design was introduced that promised remarkably
high electrical conductivity while allowing near-complete transmission
of incident light into the underlying optical device. The approach
is based on the use of metallic wires with inclined surfaces, embedded
in a transparent dielectric film. Light reflected by metallic regions
of the sample can be recovered by total internal reflection, resulting
in efficient trapping of light incident on conductive regions. Prototype
electrode geometries were fabricated by multiphoton lithography and
selective chemical deposition. Light trapping is observed by optical
microscopy and laser scanning experiments for surface tilt angles
exceeding 25°. Approximately 60% of light reflected by the metallic
electrode surface was recovered through total internal reflection.
The presented approach could lead to optoelectronic devices with significantly
improved performance across a wide spectral bandwidth.