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https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2016/01/29/transparent-conductor-proves-to-be-an-accurate-distance-ruler/

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March 20th 2025
18:40:00

The absorption coefficient determines how much light a material absorbs. For a material like ITO this absorption coefficient can be made very small, about 0.002 for the ITO that was investigated in Delft. Researcher Dr Robert Moerland, who carried out the research as a postdoc: "This low absorption coefficient means that the thin layer of ITO can provide electrical conductivity, even though normally speaking no more than one percent of the light is absorbed. However if we now place a small light source, such as a light-emitting molecule or nanoparticle, close to the ITO surface then the electrons in the ITO respond strongly to this molecule or particle. As a consequence of this, minuscule flows of current are generated in the ITO. These small currents cannot be measured directly. However, because the electrical resistance of the ITO inhibits this current, that leads to a measurable loss in the quantity of energy that the molecule can emit in the form of light."

The researchers have measured this effect for different distances between the ITO layer and the light-emitting molecules. For this the researchers used atomic layer deposition with which a glass-like layer can be deposited on the ITO with atomic precision. The agreement between the experiment and the theoretical model was so strong that the researchers could very accurately determine the distance between the molecule and the ITO from the quantity of energy loss measured. Research leader Dr Jacob Hoogenboom: "Absorbing materials such as gold or graphene are already used a lot for measuring distances with the help of light. This makes it possible to measure distances of less than 100 nanometres in, for example, biological systems and it provides us with a sort of ruler at the nanoscale. Measurements of less than 20 nanometres are, however, not possible with these materials because then the absorption is too great. Our results have shown that transparent conductors can bridge this gap and make it possible to measure distances down to 1 nanometre. Such measurements do not even require very expensive equipment. Last year some first-year undergraduates used a cheap LED and some equipment we had lying around in the lab to build their own set-up with which they could reproduce these measurements as well."

The results were published on 22 January in the online open-access journal Optica For further information please contact Dr Robert Moerland or Dr Jacob Hoogenboom.

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