Researchers have simplified the manufacturing process for creating electronic chips that can use multiple colors of light at the same time instead of just one.
The rainbow is not just colors—each color of light has its own frequency. The more frequencies you have, the higher the bandwidth for transmitting information.
Using multiple colors at once would broaden the bandwidth of not only today’s electronics, but also of the even faster upcoming “nanophotonics” that will rely on photons—fast and massless particles of light.
Only using one color of light at a time on an electronic chip currently limits technologies based on sensing changes in scattered color, such as detecting viruses in blood samples, or processing airplane images of vegetation when monitoring fields or forests.
Putting multiple colors into service at once would mean deploying multiple channels of information simultaneously, broadening the bandwidth of not only today’s electronics, but also of the even faster upcoming “nanophotonics” that will rely on photons—fast and massless particles of light—rather than slow and heavy electrons to process information with nanoscale optical devices.
IBM and Intel have already developed supercomputer chips that combine the higher bandwidth of light with traditional electronic structures. The new research focuses on simplifying the manufacturing of these chips.
The researchers also addressed another issue in the transition from electronics to nanophotonics: The lasers that produce light will need to be smaller to fit on the chip.
“A laser typically is a monochromatic device, so it’s a challenge to make a laser tunable or polychromatic,” says Alexander Kildishev, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue University. “Moreover, it’s a huge challenge to make an array of nanolasers produce several colors simultaneously on a chip.”
This requires downsizing the “optical cavity,” which is a major component of lasers. For the first time, researchers embedded so-called silver “metasurfaces”—artificial materials thinner than light waves—in nanocavities, making lasers ultrathin.
“Optical cavities trap light in a laser between two mirrors. As photons bounce between the mirrors, the amount of light increases to make laser beams possible,” Kildishev says. “Our nanocavities would make on-a-chip lasers ultrathin and multicolor.”
Better light detector can see more colors
Currently, a different thickness of an optical cavity is required for each color. By embedding a silver metasurface in the nanocavity, the researchers achieved a uniform thickness for producing all desired colors.
“Instead of adjusting the optical cavity thickness for every single color, we adjust the widths of metasurface elements,” Kildishev says.
Optical metasurfaces could also ultimately replace or complement traditional lenses in electronic devices.
“What defines the thickness of any cell phone is actually a complex and rather thick stack of lenses,” Kildishev says. “If we can just use a thin optical metasurface to focus light and produce images, then we wouldn’t need these lenses, or we could use a thinner stack.”
New method can change the coherence of light
The research appears in Nature Communications. Additional researchers from Purdue, Stanford University, and the University of Maryland contributed to the work.
A patent has been filed for this technology. The Air Force Office of Scientific Research MURI grant and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s Defense Sciences Office Extreme Optics and Imaging program supported the research.
Source: Purdue University