Towards light-controlled electronic components
2025-10-10
(Press-News.org)
In the future, could our mobile phones and internet data operate using light rather than just electricity? Now, for the first time, an international research team led by CNRS researchers1 has discovered how to generate an electron gas, found for example in LED screens, by illuminating a material made up of layers of oxides2. When the light is switched off, the gas disappears. This phenomenon, which lies at the interface of optics and electronics, paves the way for numerous applications in electronics, spintronics and quantum computing. It is described in an article to be published on 10 October in the journal Nature Materials.
Electronic components that can be controlled by light rather than electricity have the advantage of being much faster, more energy-efficient and simpler to operate: for example, the use of light-controlled transistors could eliminate up to a third of the electrical contacts on a chip, saving around a billion electrical contacts on a computer processor alone.
Other applications combining photonics and electronics could result from this discovery, such as the design of ultra-sensitive optical detectors. In this case, light effectively acts as a "booster": for the same electrical voltage, the current produced is up to 100,000 times stronger than in the dark!
This breakthrough was achieved by combining cutting-edge experiments with theoretical calculations. The arrangement of the atoms at the interface between the two oxide layers was meticulously calibrated, observations at the atomic scale were used to identify the behaviour of the atoms, and modelling helped to describe the motion of their electrons when exposed to light stimuli.
Footnotes
1 - Working at the Albert Fert Laboratory (Laboratoire Albert Fert) (CNRS/Thales). Scientists at the Strasbourg Institute of Materials Physics and Chemistry (Institut de physique et chimie des matériaux de Strasbourg) (CNRS/Université de Strasbourg) and the Solid State Physics Laboratory (Laboratoire de physique des solides) (CNRS/Université Paris-Saclay) were also involved.
2 - These gases, which occur naturally in certain semiconductor materials, had previously only been manipulated using electrical signals in oxidised materials.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-10-10
Smaller than a speck of dust and shaped like tiny discs, coccolithophores are microscopic ocean organisms with a big climate job. They draw carbon out of seawater, help produce oxygen, and their calcite plates sink to form chalk and limestone that preserve Earth’s climate history. Today, five European research organisations launched an initiative to make 10 October International Coccolithophore Day, highlighting their crucial role in regulating the planet’s carbon balance, producing oxygen, and sustaining the ocean ecosystems that underpin all life.
The campaign is led by the Ruđer Bošković Institute (Zagreb, Croatia), the ...
2025-10-10
Stress sensitivity increases the frequency, intensity, and variability of suicidal thoughts among the university community. These are the findings of a longitudinal study coordinated by the Hospital del Mar Research Institute and Pompeu Fabra University, which analyses survey data from more than 700 university students. The study defines, for the first time, three degrees of passive suicidal ideation according to their frequency, intensity and increasing variability. Taking stress sensitivity into account could have an impact on suicide prevention.
Suicide is the first cause of death among young people aged between 15 and 29 in Spain and ...
2025-10-10
Understanding people’s attitudes to interactions with sharks could help halt the global decline of shark numbers, according to new research carried out on Ascension Island.
In 2017, there were two non-fatal shark attacks at Ascension – a UK territory in the South Atlantic with a population of about 800 people.
Large numbers of sharks – mostly silky and Galapagos sharks – have affected the island’s recreational fishers, who often lose tackle and hooked fish before they can be landed.
The research team, led by the University of Exeter and ZSL, interviewed 34 islanders to assess perceptions of sharks.
“We found that human-shark conflict ...
2025-10-10
Researchers have found that low to moderate-severity fires not only benefit many bird species in the Sierra Nevada, but these benefits may persist for decades. In addition to a handful of bird species already known to be “post-fire specialists”, a broad variety of other more generalist species, like Dark-eyed Juncos and Mountain Chickadees, clearly benefited from wildfire. This research will help land managers make decisions about how to manage forests and fires as they face a changing fire regime.
In the study, published October 9, 2025 in the journal Fire Ecology, researchers from The Institute for Bird ...
2025-10-10
Women performed best on cognitive tests during ovulation but physical activity level had a stronger influence on brain function, according to a new study from researchers at UCL.
The study, published in Sports Medicine – Open, explored how the different phases of the menstrual cycle and physical activity level affected performance on a range of cognitive tests designed to mimic mental processes used in team sports and everyday life, such as the accurate timing of movements, attention, and reaction time.
The team found that women had the fastest reaction times and made the fewest errors on the day of ovulation, when the ovaries ...
2025-10-09
New research reveals that ‘third-sector’ services, such as those run by housing associations, are far more effective than government work programmes at helping the long-term unemployed in deprived areas.
The study, led by the University of East Anglia (UEA), investigated the impact of alternative support services and recommends key strategies for helping individuals move closer to employment and improve their overall wellbeing, using a person-centred, strength-based, and long-term approach.
Published in the Journal of European Social Policy, it highlights three crucial ingredients for success:
Focusing on strengths: rather than ...
2025-10-09
A global study has found that adding biochar to organic waste composting can significantly reduce emissions of potent greenhouse gases, offering a promising pathway for sustainable waste recycling and climate change mitigation.
Researchers from Nanjing Agricultural University and Sichuan University of Arts and Science analyzed data from 123 published studies covering more than 1,000 composting experiments worldwide. Their meta-analysis revealed that biochar reduced methane emissions by an average of 54 percent, nitrous oxide by 50 percent, and ammonia by 36 percent, while showing no significant effect on carbon dioxide release.
“Biochar acts like a sponge that improves aeration, ...
2025-10-09
Neli Ulrich, PhD, MS, chief scientific officer and executive director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah (the U) and Jon M. and Karen Huntsman Presidential Professor in Cancer Research in population sciences at the U, has been elected by the members of the Association of American Cancer Institutes (AACI) to serve as vice president/president-elect of the AACI Board of Directors.
Ulrich is a leading epidemiologist, whose ...
2025-10-09
Picture this: You’re on a Zoom call, Slack is buzzing, three spreadsheets are open and your inbox pings. In that moment of divided attention, you miss the tiny red flag in an email. That’s how phishing sneaks through, and with 3.4 billion malicious emails sent daily, the stakes couldn’t be higher.
A new study involving faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York's School of Management shows that multitasking makes phishing detection significantly worse: When people are overloaded ...
2025-10-09
In an approach reminiscent of the classic board game Battleship, Stanford researchers have discovered a way to characterize the microscopic structure of everyday materials such as sand and concrete with high precision.
Heterogeneous, or mixed, materials have components in random locations. For example, concrete – the most abundant human-made material – is composed of cement, water, sand, and coarse stone. Predicting where a particular component appears in a jumbled mosaic of concrete or in Earth’s subsurface ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Towards light-controlled electronic components