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Nano
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A
Few Steps Closer to Nanoscale Photonic Technology
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BERKELEY,
CA – One day our electronic technology, which is
based on the manipulation of electrons, could be
supplanted by photonics, which is based on the manipulation
of light waves (photons). If the promise of photonic
technology is realized, the high-speed processing
and movement of data today will seem so sludgelike,
people of the future will wonder how we ever got
anything done. Photonic technology is still a long
way down the road but the goal is a few steps closer
now.
Scientists with the U.S. Department of Energy's
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
and the University of California at Berkeley, working
with free-standing, chemically synthesized nanowires
and nanoribbons, have been able to guide pulses of
laser light through a variety of complex structures.
They have even, for the first time ever, been able
to send those pulses within a liquid. |

Peidong Yang, a Berkeley Lab/UC Berkeley chemist
was named the 2004 Materials Research Society Outstanding
Young Investigator for his nanoscale photonic research.
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“We've
been able to assemble nanowire lasers and semiconductor
nanoribbon waveguides into multi-wire model structures
that illustrate how light can be transmitted between
active and passive nanoscale diameter cavities,” said
Peidong Yang, a chemist with Berkeley Lab's Materials
Sciences Division, and a professor with UC Berkeley's
Chemistry Department, who led this research. “We've
also introduced a major new application area for
nanoribbons and nanowires as nanoscale optical waveguides
in a liquid media, which holds importance for microfluidics
and biology.”
Yang
and his research group are at the forefront in
the development of semiconductor nanowires and
nanoribbons, single crystals that can measure a
millimeter in length, but only a few hundred or
less nanometers in width and thickness (about one
ten-millionth of an inch). They've demonstrated
that these nano-sized ribbons can serve as “waveguides” for
channeling and directing the movement of light
waves through circuitry. Integrated circuitry on
a nanoscale (a thousand times smaller than today's
microcircuits) is a critical requirement for photonic
technology.
“Over the past couple of years, we've worked heavily
towards using nanowires as building blocks for the
purpose of photonic applications,” Yang said. “So
far, we've made nanoscale lasers, photodetectors,
and ribbons that serve as flexible sub-wavelength
optical waveguides. Ultimately, we want to integrate
all these individual components together into a photonic
system-on-a-chip that could be used to perform instant
and detailed analyses for studies in chemistry, biology
and medicine.”
In
the May 20, 2005 edition of the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Yang and
several collaborators report on the coupling of
nanowire lasers, made from either gallium nitride
or zinc oxide, to nanoribbons, made from tin oxide,
a semiconductor of keen technological interest
for its exceptional potential to be used to transport
both photons and electrons in nanoscale components.
The nanowire lasers, which were developed by Yang's
research group, are pure nanosized crystals that
emit coherent ultraviolet light via a process called “optical
pumping.”
In the PNAS paper, Yang and his co-authors show
that it is possible to transport individual pulses
of laser light from the nanowires to the ribbon waveguides,
a prerequisite if photonic devices are to be useful
in communications or computing applications. They
also demonstrate that networks of the tin oxide nanoribbons
can be used as multi-channel filters for separating
the component colors of white light and routing them
through individual channels. In addition, they report
on the creation of an optical crossbar grid made
of two pairs of orthogonal ribbons that conducted
light through abrupt 90 angles, analogous to the
cross-bars in nanowire electronics. Such crossbars,
the authors suggest, could form the basis of optical
nanowire logic.
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This
dark-field image shows optical routing in a rectangular
nanoribbon grid. Figure (a) shows the four-ribbon
structure, with the input channel extending off
the frame to the right and the output channels
labeled 1–7. The ribbons vary
in size from 300–400
nm on a side. The inset is an SEM image of the junction at the lower right vertex.
Figure (b) shows the photoluminescence that results as the input channel is pumped
with laser light pulses. This photoluminescence is guided to the seven output
ends with different intensities. The inset show a magnified view of output channels
2–7.
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Perhaps
the most intriguing of the results reported in the
PNAS paper was the demonstration by the authors that
their high refractive-index nanowires and nanoribbons
can be used to guide light in water and other liquids.
In one test, the tip of a nanoribbon was embedded
with a droplet of laser dye, and a nanopulse of blue
light was then sent into the far end of the ribbon.
This produced a strong fluorescence from within the
droplet, a fraction of which was captured by the
ribbon cavity and guided back to the ribbon's far
end, proving that these waveguides are capable of
routing signals both to and from liquids.
“The fact that the wave guiding ability of our freestanding,
flexible wires and ribbons survives in liquid media
suggests a role for nanowire light delivery in integrated
on-chip chemical analysis and biological spectroscopy,” said
Yang. “Light guided by a nanoribbon could be used
to sense fluorophores located at the end of the ribbon
and in the evanescent field along its surface. Absorbance
sensing might also be possible by launching broadband
light through a nanoribbon in contact with picoliter
volumes of solution.”
The incredible potential of photonics can be glimpsed
in today's fiber-optic communications, where a single
optical fiber can carry the equivalent of 300,000
telephone calls at the same time. But the power of
fully realized photonics goes far beyond this. Whereas
electrons must carry information sequentially, one
electron at a time, with photons of light, there's
virtually no limit to the number of information packets
that can simultaneously be transmitted. For example,
it's been estimated that a photonic Internet could
transmit data at 160 gigabits per second, which is
thousands of times faster than today's typical high-speed
connection. Another possibility is the optical computer,
which could solve problems in seconds that would
take today's electronic computers months or even
years to solve.
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This
dark-field image shows a nanoribbon with a droplet
of dye deposited near its middle. The ribbon
is excited at one end with a pulse of laser light
that probes the droplet, causing it to fluoresce
light that is collected on the other side.
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The
timeframe for when nanoscale photonic technology
will be ready for primetime consumption is difficult
to predict, as a number of issues must first be resolved,
including the need for a way to chemically synthesize
geometrically precise nanowires and nanoribbons in
mass quantities. Yang and his group are exploring
several promising techniques for accomplishing this,
including the use of optical traps, and a hybrid
bottom-up/top-down approach.
“I think we could soon be seeing commercial application
of nanowires and nanoribbons in areas that require
less integration, such as sensing and energy conversion,” Yang
said. “However, for applications that require a high
level of integration, it will take much longer.”
Co-authoring the PNAS paper with Yang were Donald
Sirbuly, Matt Law, Peter Pauzauskie, Haoquan Yan,
Alex Maslov, Kelly Knutsen, Cun-Zheng Ning and Richard
Saykally. Maslov and Ning are with the NASA Ames
Research Center, the others are with Berkeley Lab
and/or UC Berkeley.
This work was supported in part by the Camille and
Henry Dreyfus Foundation, the Beckman Foundation,
and the U.S. Department of Energy.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national
laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts
unclassified scientific research and is managed by
the University of California. Visit our Website at www.lbl.gov .
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This
story has been adapted from a news release -
Diese Meldung basiert auf einer Pressemitteilung -
Deze
tekst is gebaseerd op een nieuwsbericht - |
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