Published Friday 9 March 2012
Researchers at the University of Leeds are to benefit from a £6.5 million programme into terahertz lasers with applications ranging from security to future quantum computers.
The programme, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), will involve researchers from the School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, University of Leeds; the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, UCL; the London Centre for Nanotechnology; and the Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge.
The terahertz (THz) frequency region is the last unexploited part of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Lying between radio and optical frequencies, the bandwidth available is some 30 times greater than the entire allocated radio spectrum.
The main reason why this resource has been so little used is the complexity, bulk, high power consumption and lack of coherence of current THz technologies.
The programme will bring together the world leading teams that have pioneered THz quantum cascade lasers, microwave photonics and THz quantum state control to open up the THz spectrum for widespread scientific and commercial application, through the use for the first time of photonics-enabled coherent techniques.
The programme aims to maintain this pre-eminence and exploit it to establish UK leadership in wireless communications, with a thousand-fold enhancement in bandwidth available to untethered devices; in quantum information processing with optically controlled gates in silicon, and in advanced imaging technology, especially for biomedicine.
Principal Investigator at Leeds, Professor Giles Davies, Pro-Dean for Research and Innovation in the Faculty of Engineering, said: "This is a fantastic opportunity for us to build on our pioneering and internationally-leading work on the growth, design, fabrication and measurement of terahertz frequency quantum cascade lasers. By developing photonic control of these devices, we will transform the application of terahertz technology across the physical, biological and medical sciences, and strengthen the UK’s leadership in this emerging field.”
Principal Investigator for the programme, Professor Alwyn Seeds, Head of the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering at UCL, said: "This programme will enable us to address the THz spectrum with the same precision and sensitivity as is today possible at radio frequencies, leading to this underused part of the electromagnetic spectrum finally achieving its full scientific and commercial potential."
For more information:
Contact: Paula Gould, University of Leeds Communications & Press Office: Tel 0113 343 8059
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