A group of
Japanese scientists is exploring new types of electronic
nanocomponents for the computing industry, where the silicon
seems to have reached the maximum limit of miniaturization.
They recently built a highly efficient room-temperature
nanometer-scale laser that produces stable, continuous
streams of near-infrared laser light.
The best
thing about it is the fact that it only uses a microwatt of
power, meaning that it could soon find its way into
microscopic applications, like miniaturized circuits
containing optical devices. The entire device is only a few
microns wide and the component that actually produces laser
light has dimensions at the nanometer scale in all directions.
Toshihiko Baba, a researcher at Yokohama National
University in Japan and his colleagues used a semiconductor
material known as gallium indium arsenide phosphate (GaInAsP)
to create the new nanolaser and the research was based on a
design known as photonic-crystal laser, renowned for its small
size and efficiency.
What they did was to drill a
repeating pattern of holes through the laser material, the
actual photonic crystal, and then they inserted an
irregularity into the crystal pattern by shifting the
positions of two holes by a few nanometers.
This
irregularity does not allow light waves of most frequencies to
form in the structure, except for a small band of frequencies
that can exist in the region near the defect, thus producing a
continuous output of light, rather than a series of
pulses.
Another unique characteristic of this laser is
the fact that it can operate at room temperature in a mode
where laser light is emitted continuously, which is more
difficult to achieve because it requires careful management of
the device's power consumption and heat
dissipation.
The researchers are the first to make such
a laser which can operate continuously at room temperature,
and which could have many practical applications in the
continuous race for miniaturization.
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