Optical Control of Light on a Silicon Chip 129
An anonymous reader writes "Researchers at Cornell University have demonstrated a device that allows one low-powered beam of light to switch another on and off, on silicon, a key component for future "photonic" microcircuits in which light replaces electrons for propagating signals. It is highly desirable to use silicon--the dominant material in the microelectronic industry--as the platform for these photonic chips.
The approach developed confines the beam to be switched in a circular resonator, greatly reducing the footprint required on the chip and allowing a very small change in refractive index to shift the material from transparent to opaque."
Shedding some light... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:2, Funny)
I never thought... (Score:2)
I never thought I'd see a resonance cascade, let alone create one..!
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:1)
For the people who don't get it, it's African for "There is no spoon"
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:1)
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:1)
There is no such language as African, although there are many African languages, such as Zulu, Xhosa, Swahili etc.
I use the Afrikaans sig as my secret South African Slashdot Handshake...
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:1)
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:2)
But I'm Dutch, so I can usually decipher simple sentences like that
Re:Shedding some light... (Score:1)
I can make myself understood, but real Afrikaans people tend to laugh if I attempt to hold a real conversation with them in the language. Still, I can ask where the toilets are and buy a beer - what more do you need?
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Optronic gates (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Optronic gates (Score:4, Informative)
Can somebody explain ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Informative)
from the article itself.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
-matthew
Its faster. (Score:1, Informative)
Two: It consume less power.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, light processing does not necessarily generate heat, so there is no cooling needed to preserve the hardware, unlike the electro solution.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:3, Insightful)
What?? I thought electrons traveled at the speed of light! AFAIK the advantage of optical over electrical is that the paths of photons can cross w/o interfering with each other, thus potentially allowing for smaller processors.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Informative)
Think again. Electrons have rest mass, therefore they do not travel at the speed of light. In fact they travel really slowly in a wire, perhaps a meter per hour on a good day.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Interesting)
The *wave* in the lake, however, is much faster, carried by particles that bounce around each other much faster. Typical propagation speeds of electrical signals in network cable is a significant fraction of the speed of light, roughly 75% of the speed of light for 75-Ohm coax cable as one example.
Optical propagation in fiber-optic cable, which is what this new technology will be used for, is also limited to less than the speed of light. There, you get interesting effects because it's being transmitted through glass (or plastic for short cables), but still a significant fraction of the speed of light in vacuum.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:1)
Grad school cracked you too, eh?
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, the wave in the lake is carried by something akin to phonons (heck, they might be phonons - I hate fluid mech). That is, the wave is "transmitted" by quanta of the intermolecular forces, not by any particles in the medium itself.
Strangely enough... as you suggested, the exact same thing happens in electrical signals, except there, the wave is "transmitted" by the inter-electron forces, which we call "electromagnetic" forces. Quanta of the electromagnetic field are, of course, photons, and the reason that electrical signals travel at 75% the speed of light is because that is the speed of light in that material, roughly.
So, in a very real way, signals on chips have always been carried by photons. It takes power to shove electrons around, though, whereas photons will just propagate. So transmitting a signal purely by photons (rather than by photons through electrons) is lower power.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:1)
All of my physics teachers would be so surprised.
"You do not need light to get speed of light..." (Score:2)
If your metal is resistive, you'll dissipate some energy in that, the same as if your leght-transmitting medium is slightly opaque. But no, you do not need to
Re:"You do not need light to get speed of light... (Score:2)
Um - any electromagnetic signal can be viewed as being transmitted by photons, whether it's an electromagnetic pulse down a waveguide, light propagating through free space, or someone changing a voltage on an electrical trace, causing it to switch.
In the voltage-switch case, the photons are virtual. In the free-space case, they're real. But they're still photons.
Electron-electron interactions are caused by (virtual) photons. Electrons can't interact with each other
I guess we can agree about physics here... (Score:2)
(save in the case of a superconductor, but no one's going to suggest superconducting computers)
You know, it is funny but for the last 15 years of my life I've been personally involved with designing just such a beast and I can claim that I do suggest building it pretty soon...
Actually, the quote in GP Subj: was from my former adviser Prof. Kostya Likharev said in ex
Nothing informative about this. (Score:1)
Actually, the wave in the lake is carried by something akin to phonons (heck, they might be phonons - I hate fluid mech). That is, the wave is "transmitted" by quanta of the intermolecular forces, not by any particles in the medium itself.
What an unhelpful comment. Sure, the actual force is carried between charged poles and between particles By Pho[N]ons, uh huh, at rate C, of course, bravo for your brilliance.
The wave damn well does propagate through/via "particles in the medium itself". See that H2
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
And the wave itself is called a sound wave.
In a plasma there are sound waves, magnetosonic waves, and EM waves. And the carriers are either particles (atoms/molecules/electrons/ions), EM coupled movement of particles, and EM propagation with photons, respectively.
Phonons are a phsyics term that I believe arose when semiconductor physics was first investigated. The term "phonon" can apply to pretty much anything
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
And the wave itself is called a sound wave.
I'm not talking about the carrier particles, which are electrons in a conductor, atoms in a lattice, and of course, molecules in a liquid. I'm talking about the quanta of the wave itself.
The wave propagates through intermolecular forces. It's quantized, just like any other propagation of energy. What those quanta are called for a liquid or a gas, I don't know.
And the carriers
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
A phonon is a quantized element (as you said). It's also the measure of vibration modes in molecules. In fluids, a phonon can exist on a per-molecule or per-atom basis. You can have phonons travelling up and down a molecule if you want; it's just a word for the vibrational modes.
Sound propogation in fuilds (NOT solids) is caused by kinetic interaction of molecules and atoms. Any phonons that exist are a subset of the sound wave.
You see the difference? Phonons re
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2, Informative)
The reason why electrons travel at a finite (rather slow) speed is scattering with the crystal lattice. If you apply a voltage, i.e. create an electric field along a metallic wire you would in principle continously accelerate the electron along the wire to an kinetic energy that corresponds to the applied voltage (e.g. 1eV for 1V of applied vol
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Informative)
Umm, the speed of electron travel is irrelevant. I assume you've seen a Newton's cradle (a set of 4 or more balls on string arranged in a row. You swing the end one or two and when it hits the stationary ones the corresponding ones at the far end swing). The balls in this are only moving at a few meters per second, while the signal (when the balls collide) is moving at the speed of sound. In a chip, the individual electrons move relatively slowly, but the signal moves at the speed of light.
The problem with using electrons is that two electrons can collide. This means that your circuit paths can not cross. With something the complexity of an IC, this means that a lot of space is wasted just routing electrical paths around each other. The analogy I was given when I saw something like this demonstrated a few years back was that designing an electronic chip was like trying to lay out the road system in Great Britain without any roads crossing. Photons, on the other hand, can pass right through each other without interfering (quantum mechanics is magic like that). This means that signal distance between any two components on a chip is the same as the straight line distance (on an electronic chip it can be significantly further). This is good news, because we are starting to get close to the light speed limit with current ICs. A 3GHz chip must pass data from one pipeline stage to the next 3,000,000,000 times every second. Light can travel (roughly) 10 cm in this time. Scale this up by a few orders of magnitude and you start to get some real problems with component density.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
What this means for us in the short term future, is that switching to completely photon ICs will allow us to use larger in size microchip dies than current dies without reducing the clock speed. Obviously in the longer term this means much much smaller dies sizes and at least 1000 times faster clock speeds.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:1)
It will be even more interesting when it can be applied to circuitry! You were damn right mr. Moore..
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:5, Informative)
IAAEE, so here goes a simple explanation of why optical is more desirable for a processor.
1: Faster signal propagation. In the GHz region propagation delay can cause major timing headaches in synchronous computers (one reason your system bus is always slower than your CPU: the physical length of the clock lines on the motherboard introduce too much delay to properly synchronize at really high speeds).
2: Higher slew rates. Another limit on clock speed is the rate that the logic gates can change state, which is proportional to the power consumption (it takes more power to change the state of a logic gate more quickly). Theoretically, an optical switch uses the same amount of power regardless of speed because youre switching an optical state rather than energizing (or de-energizing) a circuit.
3: Lower power consumption. Because you aren't using ever-higher currents to force electrical states at higher speeds, your driver circuitry doesn't need to be as robust. This also leads to:
4: Lower cost. Less circuitry to push around large signals means you can save die area on the chip.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
Last time I checked, network switches had processors in them. No doubt this technology will make it into consumer PCs in the future, but for now it's more likely to make it into specialized applications like network switching.
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2)
-Jesse
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, for the optical modules in a switch, anyway.
There's a much more obvious application for this than optical CPUs.
It's every optical networking component maker's wet dream to be able to modulate light on silicon, as this would bring down costs of optical modules for 10 Gb/s, 2.5Gb/s, etc. In principle, you could live without the expensive optical components (pin-diodes, EAMs) and do it all this on one single piece of silicon.
Now we just need to find a cle
Re:Can somebody explain ... (Score:3, Insightful)
How many pins are on the latest AMD64? 939? 940? something like that. Optical interconnect could reduce that to single digits.
I'm not sure what loading concerns there are with optics... one problem I run into in my designs is needing to connect to many other devices, and that slows things down.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, one of the major benefits of optical computing is that you don't need a heatsink at all. This is because the heat put out by a CPU is due to inefficiency (in other words, because they are not room-temperature superconductors). There is little to no inefficiency in modern optical cable, especially compared to copper wiring.
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm pretty sure there will be switching losses in optical switches as well, especially while they are changing state. Optical CPUs probably won't need a heatsink until they become very advanced and operate way above the speeds achievable now, but its likely they will eventually. After all, the first few computers I had didn't need a heatsink either.
-Daniel
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:5, Informative)
And these numbers do not include any other losses, and assume that you can recover all the pump light which is not absorbed in the ring. If you don't recover that pump light, power consumption goes up by a factor of 166. (So you'd need 25kW for the 2GHz CPU with 10^6 switches...)
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:2)
I'm probably wrong, because again I'm not an electrical engineer...
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:1, Insightful)
given this, the heat produced will be identical, and IAAEE.
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:2)
All of the absorption translates the energy of the light to energy of heat. Don't fool y
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:1)
Re:Light switching CPU mentioned before? (Score:2)
Great commercial slogan potential! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Great commercial slogan potential! (Score:2)
Hey I wonder, if you overclocked such a computer, would you go back in time?
Few Questions (Score:1)
Re:Few Questions (Score:1)
But they also noticed that faster carrier recombination could be reached by surface modifications, or ion implant
Re:Few Questions (Score:1)
Why silicon? (Score:2, Interesting)
What the poster and the article both neglect to mention for us simpler types is why silicon is desirable.
Is it simply because it requires less modification to the production pipeline, or is there another more scientific reason?
Perhaps a scientific slashdotter can enlighten us. Ahem.
Re:Why silicon? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why silicon? (Score:2)
But is it solid at P4/Opteron temperatures?-)
Re:Why silicon? (Score:5, Informative)
On the other, almost all optical devices (LEDs, laser diodes) are made from III-V compund semiconductors like Galliumarsenide (GaAs), InAs, AlAs, GaN, GaP and so on. These are not available as large crystalline blocks and thus there are no such things as 300mm wafers. They are usually fabricated by expensive methodes. However, they are the only practical solution because the are so-called direct semiconductors - you just cannot do optics with indirect band-gap semiconductors like silicon.
Now, if you find THE technological trick to do optics with silicon, you benefit from the cheap silicon technology and are ready to build optical computers with cheap fabrication technology. There are some tricks around already like mixing silicon with germanium (SiGe) or putting in nano-crystals so the silicon are catching up in doing optics.
Re:Why silicon? (Score:5, Informative)
In basic structures the efficiency is however very poor. All kinds of tricks are needed in order to get the efficiency in range of direct bandgap semiconductors. We do not know yet if it is possible
One of the reasons to use silicon for IC technology is its very good native oxide. You can produce dielectric with breakdown voltages of 10MV/cm with only annealing in oxygen. Think about it 100 nm of silicon dioxides breakdown voltage is over 100 V!
Re:Why silicon? (Score:1)
Re:Why silicon? (Score:2)
Re:Why silicon? (Score:1)
If you make everything on a silicon chip, you can create complex devices the require no chip-level post wafer integration. That is currently the case for electronics based chips, like your CPU. Compound optical devices at present cannot be integrated in the same way. This thing is effectively a transistor switch done opticaly (and most importantly at low power compared to the transmitted signal power[actu
How good? (Score:3, Interesting)
That's a fantastic use...
But I'm more interested in optical computing.
In theory extrememly low power chips should be possible, but what is the absorption rate like, especially in terms of heat, and quantity of reused light.
That is ofcourse, assuming that this CAN be used for more sophistication chip design.
Has there been any suggestion of other uses, and if so, what possibilities are there available for such technology?
Many Hands... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Many Hands... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Many Hands... (Score:2)
Not only that, but it only required 1/3 of him to screw in a light bulb.
It took a team of 17 people, bravo all... (Score:4, Funny)
"Many hands make light work!"
The Cornell Nanophotonics Team [cornell.edu]
Re:It took a team of 17 people, bravo all... (Score:3, Informative)
-Jesse
Re:It took a team of 17 people, bravo all... (Score:1)
And what really chafes is that he's currently modded funnier than me.
GNYAR!
Re:It took a team of 17 people, bravo all... (Score:1)
Actually, I did NOT copy you zenmo. That would be shameless and regarded as "poor form". It was good ol' lag during posting.
Of course:
Best thoughts,
/joelethan
Re:It took a team of 17 people, bravo all... (Score:2)
Hopefully, I'll be modded informative. Or someone will figure out that I'm karma-whoring by saying this and mod me off-topic. But then my karma's already at Excellent, so mod away.
It would be funny, however, if I were modded "Funny". Hehe.
Re:It took a team of 17 people, bravo all... (Score:2)
-Jesse
--
You are dumb.
ahhh.. (Score:1, Funny)
optical fiber... (Score:1)
at this moment, we still need some converter in between, otherwise, we'd make it even faster than now.
Anyway, it might open us to new perspective... optical logics would be one, where we'd have "red", "green" and "blue" components which would be combined in some ternary/quaternary way (don't know which, yet).
Finally, this "color approach" also reminds me of some subparticle-related theory where color are also suggested...
Re:optical fiber... (Score:1)
Though quarks are described as having 'colours' (red, blue green) these are not colours per se but are more in the vein of electric charge, although there are three states rather than two (+/-).
And here's the obligatory link to assure readers I didn't pull this out of my arse. (I did, but they don't need to know that.) IANAP but I have a casual interest in the
Functional casemods? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Functional casemods? (Score:2)
This pretty much sums up m
Re:Functional casemods? (Score:2)
Jacob's Ladders, Vandegraaff generators, spark-gap devices. All sorts of 30's Sci Fi movie special effects.
Just you wait.
Christmas lights? (Score:3, Funny)
Switching time?? (Score:2, Interesting)
Herriot-Watt were doing this on a physically bigger scale back in the 80s and managed something like a 10ms switch speed.
Re:Switching time?? (Score:4, Informative)
To turn the switch "off," a second beam of light with a wavelength in the same spectral range is sent through the system. This wavelength is absorbed by the silicon through a process known as two-photon absorption creating many free electrons and "holes" (positively charged regions) in the material. This changes the refractive index of the silicon and consequently shifts the resonant frequency of the ring enough that it will no longer resonate with the 1555.5 nanometer signal. The process can theoretically take place in a few tens of picoseconds.
Very interesting stuff... It's kind of like EIT, but much more sensitive.
My God (Score:1, Funny)
Re:My God (Score:3, Funny)
"Nope, that's just a Beowulf cluster of optical Linux boxen. Nothing to worry about."
A Fair comparison (Score:2, Interesting)
although this would boost the oppurtunity for optics in processing... I do not believe it would be usefull in high speed processing simply because it would be drain lot of power (wall-plug efficiency is being worked on to improve right now!) but this could chang
Re:A Fair comparison (Score:1)
-optical wavelength = 1.1 microns. electronic wavelength
-(electrons can be compared in energy to an x-ray photons and so wavelength of x-ray photon - this concept is used in electron microscopy) this is in nanometers 2 orders smaller.
OK... first off I don't know anything about this. That said, by optical wavelength, I'm guessing 1.1 microns is a particular color of the visible light spectrum. My guess would be that this technology could work with more than just one
Re:A Fair comparison (Score:2)
To get interference, you must have two light beams in the same location. The double-slit experiment works because you have two light beams both striking the target at the same spot.
However, this is a completely different situation. Crossing two light b
Re:A Fair comparison (Score:1)
Nanovation (Score:1)
In the boom a few years ago, Nanovations Technologies was a start-up that touted ring resonator technology (in InP not Si). They blew their wad on big trade show booths and bus ads. Nanovation also gave MIT a piece of paper that said they wil give $90Million for research over a period of six years: I don't think MIT got much cash.
Research for this company came out of Northwestern University. Manufacturing
light years (Score:2)
Interesting, utility in question (Score:1, Interesting)
small rings has been shown before, perhaps not in
silicon. The use of absorption here is going to
give you a significant switching recovery time and switching energy (power consumption and heat dissipation). You will also probably find that the repetition rate was quite low, because the absorption-induced heating of the ring will also shift the resonance and cause a long-time-constant shift that can be troublesome. At a minimum this will induce bit pattern de
photonic qomputing (Score:2)
It's obsolete, guys (Score:1)
The only device that anybody should ever need to control light is "The CLAPPER".
You guys and your bloody semiconductor devices...
feature size, switching speed? (Score:2)
How fast does it switch? (E.g., 2.4GHz for currently affordable Pentiums.)
Simple (Score:2)
While it DOES have the advantage over a fully electronic system in that the optical signal being acted upon is never converted, the control signal itself is electrical. In Lucent's version, an electrical signal would cause a small mirror to move, essentially deciding where the light beam aimed at the mirror would go. (Think of TI's DLP chips, same basic idea.)
This new development is *fully* optical.
Re:how is this any different from... (Score:1)
Current optical switches work like this:
Light (Data + switch signal) goes in, convert both to electrical, electronically route the signal, convert to light, light comes out. (2 O->E, 2 E->O)
Mems:
Light (data + switch signal) in, convert switch signal to electrical, redirect light using mirrors or waveguides, light comes out. (1 O->E)
All optical switch:
Light