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Intel unveils laser breakthrough

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thegreek

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2004
Location
Philadelphia
Intel has unveiled research that could mean data is soon being moved around chips at the speed of light.

Scientists at Intel have overcome a fundamental problem that before now has prevented silicon being used to generate and amplify laser light.

The breakthrough should make it easier to interconnect data networks with the chips that process the information.

The Intel researchers said products exploiting the breakthrough should appear by the end of the decade.

Cheap as chips

"We've overcome a fundamental limit," said Dr Mario Paniccia, director of Intel's photonics technology lab.

Writing in the journal Nature, Dr Paniccia and colleagues Haisheng Rong, Richard Jones, Ansheng Liu, Oded Cohen, Dani Hak and Alexander Fang show how they have made a continuous laser from the same material used to make computer processors.

Currently, said Dr Paniccia, telecommunications equipment that amplifies the laser light that travels down fibre optic cables is very expensive because of the exotic materials, such as gallium arsenide, used to make it.

Close-up of computer chip, Eyewire
Chip making tricks could make optical processing much cheaper
Telecommunications firms and chip makers would prefer to use silicon for these light-moving elements because it is cheap and many of the problems of using it in high-volume manufacturing have been solved.

"We're trying to take our silicon competency in manufacturing and apply it to new areas," said Dr Paniccia.

While work has been done to make some of the components that can move light around, before now silicon has not successfully been used to generate or amplify the laser light pulses used to send data over long distances.

This is despite the fact that silicon is a much better amplifier of light pulses than the glass used in fibre optic cables.

Dr Paniccia said that the structure of silicon means that when laser light passes through it, some colliding photons rip electrons off the atoms within the material.

"It creates a cloud of electrons sitting in the silicon and that absorbs all the light," he said.

But the Intel researchers have found a way to suck away these errant electrons and turn silicon into a material that can both generate and amplify laser light.

Even better, the laser light produced in this way can, with the help of easy to make filters, be tuned across a very wide range of frequencies.

Semi-conductor lasers made before now have only produced light in narrow frequency ranges.

The result could be the close integration of the fibre optic cables that carry data as light with the computer chips that process it.

Dr Paniccia said the work was the one of several steps needed if silicon was to be used to make components that can carry and process light in the form of data pulses.

"It's a technical validation that it can work," he said.

Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4271825.stm
Link: http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=21291


Sounds very cool but as soon as I saw speed of light I knew it would take years to get anywhere near the consumer market.
 
thegreek said:
Sounds very cool but as soon as I saw speed of light I knew it would take years to get anywhere near the consumer market.

That is awesome for more than the stated reason. It is a terrific breakthrough for the laser industry as well. Now by selectively doping the Si, it may be possible to get a multitude of laser frequencies. If this is cost effective, this may be the next great thing in the semiconductor industry since the transistor!

However, it remains to be seen if this is a true stand alone laser or if it needs to be pumped by another laser.

To me, the most interesting aspect is the range of frequencies that can be unlocked.

Interesting read:
http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/WEBONLY/wonews/jan05/0105nsilaser.html
 
lol ;)

After spending the better part of a rare, beautiful sunny Indianapolis day, tweaking my laser in the dark dungeon (my lab); I'm entitled to sleepwalk into any discussion involving lasers :D.

Another LASER titbit:
As of now, there is only one company in the world (Nichia) which makes Blue Laser diodes. For those interested in IBM's Blue laser DVD RW's, it's not going to be commercialized any time soon. This is because every other blue laser is produced by pumping special crystals with IR lasers. The process is terribly inefficient and expensive. To give you an idea, Blue laser pointers cost > $2000.

Forgive me meatball and everybody else for digressing, but caffine makes you do strange things :beer: :D
 
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