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posted by martyb on Thursday May 30 2019, @08:07PM   Printer-friendly
from the no-word-on-making-nano-sharks dept.

Researchers at Cardiff University have shown tiny light-emitting nanolasers less than a tenth of the size of the width of a human hair can be integrated into silicon chip design.

The photonic band-edge lasers can operate at superfast speeds and have the potential to help the global electronics industry deliver a range of new applications—from optical computing to remote sensing and heat seeking,

[...] "This is the first demonstration that shows how photonic band-edge lasers can be integrated directly on patterned silicon-on-insulator platforms," said Professor [Diana] Huffaker.

"Silicon is the most widely used material in semiconductor industries. However, it has been difficult to integrate compact light sources on this material. Our research breaks through this barrier by developing extremely small lasers integrated on silicon platforms, applicable to various silicon-based electronic, optoelectronic, and photonic platforms."

The paper, "Room‐Temperature InGaAs Nanowire Array Band‐Edge Lasers on Patterned Silicon‐on‐Insulator Platforms," has been published in Physica Status Solidi—RRL.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 31 2019, @01:02AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 31 2019, @01:02AM (#849548)

    As opposed to laymen, amateurs, skulldudgeons, or the ignorati?

    I'm glad these university researchers are experts in their field. We'd still be waiting if they were just ordinary dudes chilling in the pub with no idea what they were doing.