Posted on 04/17/2020 1:21:58 PM PDT by LibWhacker
Scientists have been chasing silicon-based lasers for yearstheyd provide a faster, cheaper way to move data across or between computer chips. Now researchers say theyve gotten efficient light emission from silicon by forcing it into a new shape.
Replacing copper wires with beams of light makes it possible to send data from one transistor on a chip to another, or from one chip to another, at higher speeds and with less power, without having to worry about the excess heat generated by electrical resistance. Other types of lasers can do that, but the semiconductors theyre made of are more expensive than silicon, and they have to be manufactured separately and be attached to the chip. A silicon laser could be produced using the same processes for building the chips.
To reshape the crystal, the trick was to make it out of an alloy of silicon and germanium (SiGe), and grow it on top of thin nanowires made of gallium arsenide (GaAs). The GaAs crystal is naturally five-sided, so it forces the SiGe to take on the same hexagonal shape, even though a silicon crystal is normally a cube.
We change the crystal symmetry and by doing this, we change the optoelectronic properties of the semiconductor, says Erik Bakkers, head of the Advanced Nanomaterials and Devices group at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands. Bakkers and his colleagues published their work in the current issue of Nature.
Normally, silicon wont lase because it has an indirect bandgap. In direct bandgap materials, when an excited electron drops from the higher-energy conduction band to the lower-energy valence band, it releases the excess energy as a photon. In an indirect-bandgap material such as silicon, excess energy comes out as heat instead of light. By reshaping the crystal, Bakkers and company essentially moved the bandgap to make it direct and allow the silicon to emit photons. A look inside the Metal Organic Vapor Phase Epitaxy (MOVPE). This machine was used to grow the nanowires with hexagonal silicon-germanium shells. Photo: Nando Harmsen/Eindhoven University of Technology A look inside the Metal Organic Vapor Phase Epitaxy (MOVPE), which was used to grow nanowires with hexagonal silicon-germanium shells.
Though they were able to measure light emission, their material does not yet produce a laser beam. Bakkers is confident, though, that theyll achieve that sometime this year. The germanium is also limiting them to producing light at a wavelength of 1800 nm. Theyd like to get that to 1550 nm, the standard wavelength used in optical communications. They may be able to achieve that by introducing some mechanical strain on the silicon.
The idea of exploring the hexagonal phase of SiGe for efficient light emission is interesting, says Anthony Levi, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Southern California. He points out that there are a number of issues to be dealt with before this could be a practical silicon laser, including reducing defects in the crystal. Bakkers agrees there are challenges, but hopes to overcome them within the next four or five years.
“Don’t lase me, bro!”
I must be missing something here - why not pentagonal?
Computers are so fast that physical size is a limiting factor. Using light for longer distances (were talking inches) across circuits allows for larger overall size.
Aw, they’re lovely, but I’ve already got a yard full of Drummond phlox...
What shape do you get if you join pentagons together in enclosed shape?
I don’t have any paper before me, so I can’t test my theory.
GaAs is not “five-sided”. It has the cubic zincblends structure.
What is the difference is velocity, comparing signal on copper and light in “glass”? My impression is these velocities are not much different, both being fairly close to “c”.
Moores law is limited by physics
Moreover they should have said decades... this has been chased since the eighties
*ping*
Its actually much more complicated, and much more varied, than we expect.
For example, in copper at 5 GHz the skin depth is about 1 micron, the wavelength is about 6 microns and the velocity is about 30,000 m/s.
4 orders of magnitude at the frequencies were considering.
Great info. Thank you! I knew skin effect (Litz wire), but never associated it with that much loss of velocity (in or on copper).
Unrelated odd effect is "photon velocity" inside a star. It takes a long time for a photon at the core to make it to the surface on account of frequent absorptions and re-emissions.
Propagation in wire can be as low as 3.7m/s.
Not a typo.
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