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Caroline Ross, MIT:
“Diode for Light - Important step toward computing with light
Research at MIT produces long-sought component to allow complete optical
circuits on silicon chips.
November 25, 2011
There has been enormous progress in recent years toward the development
of photonic chips — devices that use light beams instead of electrons to
carry out their computational tasks. Now, researchers at MIT have filled
in a crucial piece of the puzzle that could enable the creation of
photonic chips on the standard silicon material that forms the basis for
most of today’s electronics.
Caroline
Ross, the Toyota Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at MIT
In many of today’s communication systems, data travels via light beams
transmitted through optical fibers. Once the optical signal arrives at
its destination, it is converted to electronic form, processed through
electronic circuits and then converted back to light using a laser. The
new device could eliminate those extra electronic-conversion steps,
allowing the light signal to be processed directly.
The new component is a “diode for light,” says Caroline Ross, the Toyota
Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at MIT, who is co-author
of a paper reporting the new device that was published online Nov. 13 in
the journal Nature Photonics. It is analogous to an electronic diode, a
device that allows an electric current to flow in one direction but
blocks it from going the other way; in this case, it creates a one-way
street for light, rather than electricity.
This is essential, Ross explains, because without such a device stray
reflections could destabilize the lasers used to produce the optical
signals and reduce the efficiency of the transmission. Currently, a
discrete device called an isolator is used to perform this function, but
the new system would allow this function to be part of the same chip
that carries out other signal-processing tasks.
To develop the device, the researchers had to find a material that is
both transparent and magnetic — two characteristics that rarely occur
together. They ended up using a form of a material called garnet, which
is normally difficult to grow on the silicon wafers used for microchips.
Garnet is desirable because it inherently transmits light differently in
one direction than in another: It has a different index of refraction —
the bending of light as it enters the material — depending on the
direction of the beam.
The researchers were able to deposit a thin film of garnet to cover one
half of a loop connected to a light-transmitting channel on the chip.
The result was that light traveling through the chip in one direction
passes freely, while a beam going the other way gets diverted into the
loop.
The whole system could be made using standard microchip manufacturing
machinery, Ross says. “It simplifies making an all-optical chip,” she
says. The design of the circuit can be produced “just like an
integrated-circuit person can design a whole microprocessor. Now, you
can do an integrated optical circuit.”
That could make it much easier to commercialize than a system based on
different materials, Ross says. “A silicon platform is what you want to
use,” she says, because “there’s a huge infrastructure for silicon
processing. Everyone knows how to process silicon. That means they can
set about developing the chip without having to worry about new
fabrication techniques.”
This
technology could greatly boost the speed of data-transmission systems,
for two reasons: First, light travels much faster than electrons.
Second, while wires can only carry a single electronic data stream,
optical computing enables multiple beams of light, carrying separate
streams of data, to pass through a single optical fiber or circuit
without interference. “This may be the next generation in terms of
speed” for communications systems, Ross says.
Ross’ colleagues in the research included Lionel Kimerling, the Thomas
Lord Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, and former students
Lei Bi ’11 and Juejun Hu PhD ’09. The work was funded by the National
Science Foundation and an Intel fellowship for Bi.
“This is a big advance in optical communications,” says Bethanie Stadler,
a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of
Minnesota, who was not involved in this research. The work is
“significant,” she says, “as the first device with garnet integrated
onto [silicon] devices.” |