(Press-News.org) Cambridge, MA – Optical frequency combs are specially designed lasers that act like rulers to accurately and rapidly measure specific frequencies of light. They can be used to detect and identify chemicals and pollutants with extremely high precision.
Frequency combs would be ideal for remote sensors or portable spectrometers because they can enable accurate, real-time monitoring of multiple chemicals without complex moving parts or external equipment.
But developing frequency combs with high enough bandwidth for these applications has been a challenge. Often, researchers must add bulky components that limit scalability and performance.
Now, a team of MIT researchers has demonstrated a compact, fully integrated device that uses a carefully crafted mirror to generate a stable frequency comb with very broad bandwidth. The mirror they developed, along with an on-chip measurement platform, offers the scalability and flexibility needed for mass-producible remote sensors and portable spectrometers. This development could enable more accurate environmental monitors that can identify multiple harmful chemicals from trace gases in the atmosphere.
“The broader the bandwidth a spectrometer has, the more powerful it is, but dispersion is in the way. Here we took the hardest problem that limits bandwidth and made it the centerpiece of our study, addressing every step to ensure robust frequency comb operation,” says Hu, Distinguished Professor in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT, principal investigator in the Research Laboratory of Electronics, and senior author on an open-access paper describing the work.
He is joined on the paper by lead author Tianyi Zeng PhD ’23; as well as Yamac Dikmelik of General Dynamics Mission Systems; Feng Xie and Kevin Lascola of Thorlabs Quantum Electronics; and David Burghoff SM ’09, PhD ’14, an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin. The research appears today in Light: Science and Applications.
Broadband combs
An optical frequency comb produces a spectrum of equally spaced laser lines, which resemble the teeth of a comb.
Scientists can generate frequency combs using several types of lasers for different wavelengths. By using a laser that produces long wave infrared radiation, such as a quantum cascade laser, they can use frequency combs for high-resolution sensing and spectroscopy.
In dual-comb spectroscopy (DCS), the beam of one frequency comb travels straight through the system and strikes a detector at the other end. The beam of the second frequency comb passes through a chemical sample before striking the same detector. Using the results from both combs, scientists can faithfully replicate the chemical features of the sample at much lower frequencies, where signals can be easily analyzed.
The frequency combs must have high bandwidth, or they will only be able to detect a small frequency range of chemical compounds, which could lead to false alarms or inaccurate results.
Dispersion is the most important factor that limits a frequency comb’s bandwidth. If there is dispersion, the laser lines are not evenly spaced, which is incompatible with the formation of frequency combs.
“With long wave infrared radiation, the dispersion will be very high. There is no way to get around it, so we have to find a way to compensate for it or counteract it by engineering our system,” Hu says.
Many existing approaches aren’t flexible enough to be used in different scenarios or don’t enable high enough bandwidth.
Hu’s group previously solved this problem in a different type of frequency comb, one that used terahertz waves, by developing a double-chirped mirror (DCM).
A DCM is a special type of optical mirror that has multiple layers with thicknesses that change gradually from one end to the other. They found that this DCM, which has a corrugated structure, could effectively compensate for dispersion when used with a terahertz laser.
“We tried to borrow this trick and apply it to an infrared comb, but we ran into lots of challenges,” Hu says.
Because infrared waves are 10 times shorter than terahertz waves, fabricating the new mirror required an extreme level of precision. At the same time, they needed to coat the entire DCM in a thick layer of gold to remove the heat under laser operation. Plus, their dispersion measurement system, designed for terahertz waves, wouldn’t work with infrared waves, which have frequencies that are about 10 times higher than terahertz.
“After more than two years of trying to implement this scheme, we reached a dead end,” Hu says.
A new solution
Ready to throw in the towel, the team realized something they had missed. They had designed the mirror with corrugation to compensate for the lossy terahertz laser, but infrared radiation sources aren’t as lossy.
This meant they could use a standard DCM design to compensate for dispersion, which is compatible with infrared radiation. However, they still needed to create curved mirror layers to capture the beam of the laser, which made fabrication much more difficult than usual.
“The adjacent layers of mirror differ only by tens of nanometers. That level of precision precludes standard photolithography techniques. On top of that, we still had to etch very deeply into the notoriously stubborn material stacks. Achieving those critical dimensions and etch depths was key to unlocking broadband comb performance,” Zeng says. In addition to precisely fabricating the DCM, they integrated the mirror directly onto the laser, making the device extremely compact. The team also developed a high-resolution, on-chip dispersion measurement platform that doesn’t require bulky external equipment.
“Our approach is flexible. As long as we can use our platform to measure the dispersion, we can design and fabricate a DCM that compensates for it,” Hu adds.
Taken together, the DCM and on-chip measurement platform enabled the team to generate stable infrared laser frequency combs that had far greater bandwidth than can usually be achieved without a DCM.
In the future, the researchers want to extend their approach to other laser platforms that could generate combs with even greater bandwidth and higher power for more demanding applications.
###
This work is funded, in part, by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
END
New laser “comb” can enable rapid identification of chemicals with extreme precision
The ultrabroadband infrared frequency comb could be used for chemical detection in portable spectrometers or high-resolution remote sensors
2025-08-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
The “Mississippi Bubble” and the complex history of Haiti
2025-08-21
Cambridge, MA – Many things account for Haiti’s modern troubles. A good perspective on them comes from going back in time to 1715 or so — and grappling with a far-flung narrative involving the French monarchy, a financial speculator named John Law, and a stock-market crash called the “Mississippi Bubble.”
To condense: After the death of Louis XIV in 1715, France was mired in debt following decades of war. The country briefly turned over its economic policy to Law, a ...
Regular sleep schedule may improve recovery from heart failure, study finds
2025-08-21
People recovering from heart failure should consider improving the regularity of their sleep, a study led by Oregon Health & Science University suggests.
The research team found that even moderately irregular sleep doubles the risk of having another clinical event within six months, according to a study published today in the journal JACC Advances. A clinical event could be another visit to the emergency room, hospitalization or even death.
“Going to bed and waking up at consistent times is important for overall health,” said lead author Brooke Shafer, Ph.D., ...
Wrinkles in atomically thin materials unlock ultraefficient electronics
2025-08-21
HOUSTON – (Aug. 21, 2025) – Wrinkles can be an asset — especially for next-generation electronics. Rice University scientists have discovered that tiny creases in two-dimensional materials can control electrons’ spin with record precision, opening the path to ultracompact, energy-efficient electronic devices.
If most devices today use the charge of electrons flowing through silicon to process and encode information, future computing may instead harness spin — a quantum property of electrons that takes on either an “up” or “down” value. Computing with spin could overcome the limitations of current silicon-based technology, reducing ...
Brain neurons are responsible for day-to-day control of blood sugar
2025-08-21
The brain controls the release of glucose in a wide range of stressful circumstances, including fasting and low blood sugar levels.
However, less attention has been paid to its role in day-to-day situations.
In a study published in Molecular Metabolism, University of Michigan researchers have shown that a specific population of neurons in the hypothalamus help the brain maintain blood glucose levels under routine circumstances.
Over the past five decades, researchers have shown that dysfunction of the nervous system can lead to fluctuations in blood glucose levels, especially ...
Moffitt study uncovers new mechanism of immunotherapy resistance
2025-08-21
TAMPA, Fla. (Aug. 21, 2025) — A new international study led by researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center, the Karolinska Institutet and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center has uncovered a surprising mechanism of resistance to immunotherapy: cancer’s ability to injure nearby nerves.
The study, published in Nature, shows that when cancer cells infiltrate and damage tumor-associated nerves, it triggers an inflammatory response that ultimately weakens the effectiveness of anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. This widely used treatment works by unleashing the body’s immune system to attack ...
Brain area 46 is at the center of a network for emotion regulation in marmosets
2025-08-21
New experiments by Christian Wood and colleagues suggest that the marmoset brain area 46 (A46) in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is key to a functional network that regulates positive and negative emotion-related processes. The findings relate directly to motivation and responsiveness to threat, which play important roles in depression and anxiety. The study also sheds some light on how non-invasive treatments such as transcranial magnetic stimulation and the drug ketamine may work within the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex to reduce depression and anxiety. Wood et al. show that inactivation of A46 blunts reward-seeking behavior (a hallmark of depression) ...
Self-morphing, wing-like feet enhance surface maneuverability of water striders and robots
2025-08-21
A collaborative team of researchers from the University of California, Berkeley, the Georgia Institute of Technology, and Ajou University in South Korea has revealed that the unique fan-like propellers of Rhagovelia water striders —which allow them to glide across fast-moving streams—open and close passively, like a paintbrush, ten times faster than the blink of an eye. Inspired by this biological innovation, the team developed a revolutionary insect-scale robot that incorporates engineered self-morphing fans that mimic ...
Zooming in reveals a world of detail: breakthrough method unveils the inner workings of our cells
2025-08-21
In the past decade there has been significant interest in studying the expression of our genetic code down to the level of single cells, to identify the functions and activities of any cell through the course of health or disease.
The identity of a cell, and the way that identity can go awry, is critical to its role in many of the biggest health challenges we face, including cancer, neurodegeneration, or genetic and developmental disorders. Zooming in on single cells allows us to tell the difference between variants which would otherwise be lost in the average of a region. This is essential for finding new medical solutions to diseases.
Most single cell ...
DNA from extinct hominin may have helped ancient peoples survive in the Americas
2025-08-21
Thousands of years ago, ancient humans undertook a treacherous journey, crossing hundreds of miles of ice over the Bering Strait to the unknown world of the Americas.
Now, a new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder suggests that these nomads carried something surprising with them—a chunk of DNA inherited from a now-extinct species of hominin, which may have helped humans adapt to the challenges of their new home.
The researchers will publish their results Aug. 21 in the journal Science.
“In terms of evolution, this is an incredible ...
UC Irvine-led research team uncovers global wildfire paradox
2025-08-21
Irvine, Calif. — Researchers at the University of California, Irvine and other institutions have spotted a contradiction in worldwide wildfire trends: Despite a 26 percent decline in total burned area from 2002 to 2021, the number of people exposed to wildfires has surged by nearly 40 percent.
The study, published today in Science, revealed another statistic that may come as a surprise to people who rely primarily on Western news sources: While high-profile wildfire disasters in the United States, Canada and Australia often dominate headlines, the researchers found that 85 percent of all human exposures to wildfires during that period occurred in ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Moisture changes the rules of atmospheric traffic jams
Stevens INI advances global Alzheimer’s research with support from the Simon family
New laser “comb” can enable rapid identification of chemicals with extreme precision
The “Mississippi Bubble” and the complex history of Haiti
Regular sleep schedule may improve recovery from heart failure, study finds
Wrinkles in atomically thin materials unlock ultraefficient electronics
Brain neurons are responsible for day-to-day control of blood sugar
Moffitt study uncovers new mechanism of immunotherapy resistance
Brain area 46 is at the center of a network for emotion regulation in marmosets
Self-morphing, wing-like feet enhance surface maneuverability of water striders and robots
Zooming in reveals a world of detail: breakthrough method unveils the inner workings of our cells
DNA from extinct hominin may have helped ancient peoples survive in the Americas
UC Irvine-led research team uncovers global wildfire paradox
Extinct human relatives left a genetic gift that helped people thrive in the Americas
Overinflated balloons: study reveals how cellular waste disposal system deals with stress
The rise of plant life changed how rivers move, Stanford study shows
What traits matter when predicting disease emergence in new populations?
Overcoming disordered energy in light-matter interactions
Zoo populations hold key to saving Pacific pocket mouse
Astronomers detect the brightest fast radio burst of all time
OET inaugural cover | 30 years of nanoimprint lithography: Leading the new era of nanomanufacturing
Metalens evolution: From individual devices to integrated arrays
Advancing disaster response with the EBD dataset
Putting solar panels in space could aid Europe’s net-zero transition
Ambient documentation technologies reduce physician burnout and restore ‘joy’ in medicine
Solar panels in space could cut Europe’s renewable energy needs by 80%
Computational approach meets biology to connect neural progenitor cells with human disorders
GLP-1 receptor agonists and cancer risk in adults with obesity
Impact of a weight loss intervention on 1-year weight change in women with stage II/III breast cancer
Novel tool helps identify key targets to strengthen CAR NK cell therapies
[Press-News.org] New laser “comb” can enable rapid identification of chemicals with extreme precisionThe ultrabroadband infrared frequency comb could be used for chemical detection in portable spectrometers or high-resolution remote sensors