(Press-News.org) Just as electronic circuits work with electrical charges, optical circuits process pulses of light, which gives them a distinct advantage in terms of speed. Optical technologies are therefore the object of intense research, aiming to develop novel optical devices that can control the flow of light at the nanometer scale. EPFL scientists have developed a new method that can optimally design a widely-used class of optical devices with unprecedented effectiveness. Their designs have been fabricated in the US, at the University of Rochester, and successfully tested in Italy, at the University of Pavia. In two publications in Applied Physics Letters and Scientific Reports, the result of this collaboration will considerably speed up the development of optical circuits.
In order to use light for encoding information in future communication systems, it is first necessary to regulate its flow and retain it for even a fraction of a second, to avoid signal "traffic jams". This is achieved by optical nanocavities, which are arrangements of mirrors that force light to bounce between them and can therefore retain it in a small space. They are widely used in lasers and optical devices, and are made from a variety of materials, such as silicon. Optical nanocavities are also ideal for building optical circuits, which regulate the flow of light just like conventional transistors regulate the flow of electrons. Optical circuits can also be integrated with electronic circuits into extremely compact structures to increase performance in information and communication technologies.
The most promising optical nanocavities are built inside structures called "photonic crystals", giving them the name "photonic crystal nanocavities (PCNs)". PCNs operate like the components of an electronic circuit, except they control the flow of light instead of the flow of electrons. Because of their complex geometry, the optimization of PCNs is a challenging task, requiring lengthy computer simulations of hundreds of possible designs before selecting the best for nanofabrication.
The group of Vincenzo Savona at EPFL has developed a novel method to design, simulate and optimize PCNs and applied it to one of the most common PCN types, used widely in commercial optical circuits. The goal was to maximize the PCN quality factor – a term that refers to the length of time the nanocavity can hold a photon before it escapes. "Ideally you want to confine light as long as possible and inside a volume as small as possible", says Savona. "The nanocavities we are optimizing are smaller than the optical wavelength itself (about 1 micrometer) and have a quality factor higher than 1 million, meaning that a photon can go back and forth inside the nanocavity more than 1 million times before escaping."
The scientists perfected a computer modeling algorithm that can simulate a single PCN structure in matter of minutes –much faster than the several hours typically required by commercial tools. As PCN optimization requires simulating thousands of different structures, this new approach offers considerable advantages in terms of time and effectiveness.
The fast algorithm was combined with an optimization software tool that is referred to as 'genetic' or 'evolutionary' because it uses a kind of 'natural' selection to choose the best nanocavity structures. The "evolutionary" process begins by regarding each PCN structure as an individual in a population, like animals in a herd. The individuals then "breed" between them, meaning that two single PCN structures combine to create a new one that is a cross-over between its two parents.
As PCN generations succeeded one another, Savona's algorithm rapidly simulated the structures, and the evolutionary software selected the best individuals – in this case, the ones that showed the best "fitness" with respect to a desired quality, e.g. photon lifetime or frequency. The entire process is fully automated and typically involves a few hundreds of generations, each including one hundred individuals. "Our fast method means that an optimization will typically take a couple of days on a computer", says Savona.
The best PCN designs were sent to a laboratory in the US to be nanofabricated on a silicon platform. From there, the PCNs were shipped to another laboratory in Italy, where they were successfully tested. "In the end, we improved all of the most widespread PCN designs by a factor of 10-20 in terms of lifetime of the confined photons", Savona explains. The devices show some of the highest quality factors ever measured in PCNs, which can have a tremendous impact on the development of integrated photonic circuits.
INFORMATION:
This work is part of a larger study involving the EPFL Laboratory of Theoretical Physics of Nanosystems, Professor Romuald Houdré's lab at EPFL's Laboratory of Quantum Optoelectronics, the University of Rochester Department of Physics and Astronomy, and the University of Pavia Department of Physics. The original idea and its theoretical demonstration have been simultaneously published in Scientific Reports, authored by Vincenzo Savona and his PhD student, Momchil Minkov. The Applied Physics Letters paper shows its first practical application in a device.
References
Lai Y, Pirotta S, Urbinati G, Gerace D, Minkov M, Savona V, Badolato A, Galli M. Genetically designed L3 photonic crystal nanocavities with measured quality factor exceeding one million. Applied Physics Letters 16 June 2014. DOI: 10.1063/1.4882860
Minkov M, Savona V. Automated optimization of photonic crystal slab cavities. Scientific Reports 4, 5124 DOI: 10.1038/srep05124
A faster path to optical circuits
2014-06-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Discovery of a bud-break gene could lead to trees adapted for a changing climate
2014-06-16
CORVALLIS, Ore. — Scientists have confirmed the function of a gene that controls the awakening of trees from winter dormancy, a critical factor in their ability to adjust to environmental changes associated with climate change.
While other researchers have identified genes involved in producing the first green leaves of spring, the discovery of a master regulator in poplar trees (Populus species) could eventually lead to breeding plants that are better adapted for warmer climates.
The results of the study that began more than a decade ago at Oregon State University ...
Study shows chikungunya mutation places several countries at risk of epidemic
2014-06-16
GALVESTON, Texas — For the first time, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston researchers were able to predict further adaptations of the chikungunya virus that recently spread from Africa to several continents that will likely result in even more efficient transmission and infection of more people by this virus strain.
A key factor in a viruses' potential to sustain its circulation and ultimately cause disease is its ability to adapt to new host environments. The number and complexity of these adaptations is shaped by how hospitable the new host is to a certain ...
Cover the bases: Sports physicals are no substitute for comprehensive checkups
2014-06-16
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Nearly half of parents say any qualified health care provider – not just a child's usual provider – can do a sports physical, according to a new University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health.
One quarter of the 434 parents surveyed in the poll took their child to an alternate location for the most recent sports physical, says Sarah J. Clark, M.P.H. , associate director of the National Poll on Children's Health and associate research scientist in the University of Michigan Department of Pediatrics.
Sports physicals ...
C. difficile epidemic should concern not only hospital patients but people at home
2014-06-16
Without proper infection prevention in hospitals, and now homes, the Clostridium difficile bacteria poses a major health threat, cautions a Case Western Reserve University infection control researcher.
While mainly a concern in hospitals, cases of the C. difficile infection (or C. diff) are on the rise in the community, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that has seen increased reports of the infected people who have had no contact with hospital patients with the infection. The CDC reported 7.6 people out of 100,000 who had no contact with people ...
Diabetes distress vs. depression: Are people with type 2 being misdiagnosed?
2014-06-16
June 16, 2014 (San Francisco) – Researchers have long understood there is a strong association between diabetes and depression. But new research presented at the American Diabetes Association's 74th Scientific Sessions® shows that symptoms of depression in people with type 2 diabetes can be significantly reduced through interventions for "diabetes distress," suggesting that much of what is being labeled as depression may not be a co-morbid psychiatric disorder after all, but rather a reaction to living with a stressful, complex disease that is often difficult to manage. ...
Long-term follow-up of diabetes prevention program shows continued reduction in diabetes development
2014-06-16
June 16, 2014 (San Francisco) – Treatments used to decrease the development of type 2 diabetes continue to be effective an average of 15 years later, according to the latest findings of the Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study, a landmark study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The results, presented at the American Diabetes Association's 74th Scientific Sessions®, come more than a decade after the Diabetes Prevention Program, or DPP, reported its original findings. In 2001, after an average of three years of study, the DPP announced that the study's ...
Many overestimate exercise intensity: York University study
2014-06-16
TORONTO, June 16, 2014 — Do you work out for health benefits and feel you are exercising more than enough? You might be among the many Canadians who overrate how hard they work out or underestimate what moderate intensity exercise means, according to a recent study out of York University's Faculty of Health.
"Our study findings suggest that the majority of young and middle-aged to old adults underestimate the intensity of physical activity that is required to achieve health benefits," says Professor Jennifer Kuk, School of Kinesiology and Health Science. "This is worrisome ...
UGA researchers discover new method to reduce disease-causing inflammation
2014-06-16
Athens, Ga. – Researchers at the University of Georgia report in the Journal of Biological Chemistry that an enzyme known as Tumor Progression Locus 2, or Tpl2, plays a key role in directing and regulating several important components of the body's immune system. Their discovery may one day lead to new treatments for many common autoimmune diseases.
"We know that immune dysfunction plays a serious role in a number of conditions, and we need better methods for controlling chronic inflammation," said Wendy Watford, assistant professor of infectious diseases in UGA's College ...
Common blood pressure medication may pose risk to older adults
2014-06-16
Dallas – June 12, 2014 – Adults over 65 who have recently begun thiazide diuretics are at a greater risk for developing metabolic-related adverse events, researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have found.
More than two-thirds of older adults have high blood pressure in the United States and thiazide diuretics are often recommended as the initial medication for these hypertensive patients. Thiazide diuretics primarily inhibit sodium transport in the kidney, leading to urinary loss of sodium and water, which decreases blood pressure. While the risks of this medication ...
High-altitude weight loss may have an evolutionary advantage
2014-06-16
Weight loss at high altitudes—something universally experienced by climbers and people who move to higher terrain—may not be a detrimental effect, but rather is likely an evolutionarily-programmed adaptation, according to a new article in BioEssays.
Researchers explain that low oxygen causes fat and protein to be broken down, leading to the release of ketones and amino acids, which act as metabolic fuels. Also, ketones enhance the efficiency of oxygen use by the body whilst both ketones and certain amino acids protect cellular components from the detrimental effects of ...