Making India proud

Updated on: Monday, October 11, 2010

Steffi Sesuraj of the University of Southampton’s School of Electronics and Computer Science (ECS), has been awarded the ARM Award for Best Electronic Engineering Student, a prestigious European SET (Science, Engineering and Technology) Student of the Year Award 2010.

Sesuraj was nominated by her supervisor, Professor Darren Bagnall, of the Nano Research Group at ECS, on the basis of her excellent performance on the B.Eng. Electronic Engineering course, and especially for her third-year project on the development of more efficient solar cells: ‘Design, Fabrication and Characterisation of a Nano-Plasmonic back reflector for a-Si Thin Film Solar Cells’.

“Working on developing a Nano-Plasmonic Back Reflector was definitely an exciting venture for me,” says Sesuraj. “The field of plasmonic application for solar cells has demonstrated that nanotechnology is no more a ‘thing of the future’ — it has the potential to be implemented in the present, on a large-scale basis.”

According to Professor Bagnall, “Steffi’s experimental work demonstrated for the first time that plasmonic arrays of metal nanoparticles can be used to significantly improve the performance of solar cells. Researchers have been attracted to the idea of using metal nanoparticles to provide ‘plasmonic solar cells’ for around six years. Now, as a result of Steffi’s detailed and innovative work we are much better placed to demonstrate working with plasmonic solar cells. This is a considerable achievement since it has provided a new method for how the cells should be constructed.”

Sesuraj will now develop this project in her doctoral research supervised by Professor Bagnall in the ECS Nano Research Group, using the advanced technology at the Southampton Nanofabrication Centre. Her aim will be to use nanotechnology to engineer a design for thinner and therefore more cost-effective solar cells that maintain high efficiency.

As she says, “This project was a wonderful opportunity to work with the ECS Nano group. Its members are very talented and friendly and made me feel part of the group. I definitely got a lot out of the project in terms of scientific knowledge and research skills. The enthusiasm which I’ve developed for plasmonics applications and nanotechnology in general has motivated me to continue with a Ph.D. in this area, at the Nano group, under Professor Darren Bagnall and my co-supervisor Dr Harold Chong.”

Sesuraj attended school in India and in The Netherlands. Her primary education was at St. Anne’s Convent (Pune) and the Dr. Aletta Jacobs International School in The Netherlands. She then moved to Chennai where she completed the first three years of her higher education at Good Shepherd Mat-riculation School. She finished her International Baccalaureate in Arnhem International School in The Netherlands.

Says Sesuraj, “I’ve constantly been on the move in my life, from India to the Netherlands and now to Southampton. I feel at home in this University and look forward to another four exciting and fruitful years of research.”

The SET European Awards were presented at a glittering ceremony attended by hundreds of technology academicians. Way to go!
 

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