December 1, 2017
Original link: http://www.kurzweilai.net/using-light-instead-of-electrons-promises-faster-smaller-more-efficient-computers-and-smartphones
Original link: http://www.kurzweilai.net/using-light-instead-of-electrons-promises-faster-smaller-more-efficient-computers-and-smartphones
Trapped light for optical computation (credit: Imperial College London)
By forcing light to go through a smaller gap than ever before, a research team at Imperial College London has taken a step toward computers based on light instead of electrons.
Light would be preferable for computing because it can carry much-higher-density information, it’s much faster, and more efficient (generates little to no heat). But light beams don’t easily interact with one other. So information on high-speed fiber-optic cables (provided by your cable TV company, for example) currently has to be converted (via a modem or other device) into slower signals (electrons on wires or wireless signals) to allow for processing the data on devices such as computers and smartphones.
Electron-microscope
image of an optical-computing nanofocusing device that is 25 nanometers
wide and 2 micrometers long, using grating couplers (vertical lines) to
interface with fiber-optic cables. (credit: Nielsen et al.,
2017/Imperial College London)
To overcome that limitation, the researchers used metamaterials to squeeze light into a metal channel only 25 nanometers (billionths of a meter) wide, increasing its intensity and allowing photons to interact over the range of micrometers (millionths of meters) instead of centimeters.*
That means optical computation that previously required a centimeters-size device can now be realized on the micrometer (one millionth of a meter) scale, bringing optical processing into the size range of electronic transistors.
The results were published Thursday Nov. 30, 2017 in the journal Science.
* Normally, when two light beams cross each other, the individual photons do not interact or alter each other, as two electrons do when they meet. That means a long span of material is needed to gradually accumulate the effect and make it useful. Here, a “plasmonic nanofocusing” waveguide is used, strongly confining light within a nonlinear organic polymer.