https://unews.utah.edu/lightning-fast-communications/
A mineral discovered in Russia in the 1830s known as a
perovskite holds a key to the next step in ultra-high-speed communications and
computing.
Researchers
from the University of Utah’s departments of electrical and computer
engineering and physics and astronomy have discovered that a special kind of
perovskite, a combination of an organic and inorganic compound that has the
same structure as the original mineral, can be layered on a silicon wafer to
create a vital component for the communications system of the future. That
system would use the terahertz spectrum, the next generation of communications
bandwidth that uses light instead of electricity to shuttle data, allowing
cellphone and internet users to transfer information a thousand times faster
than today.
The new
research, led by University of Utah electrical and computer engineering
professor Ajay Nahata and physics and astronomy Distinguished Professor Valy
Vardeny, was published Monday, Nov. 6 in the latest edition of Nature
Communications.
PHOTO CREDIT: Dan
Hixon/University of Utah
College of Engineering
The
terahertz range is a band between infrared light and radio waves and utilizes
frequencies that cover the range from 100 gigahertz to 10,000 gigahertz (a
typical cellphone operates at just 2.4 gigahertz). Scientists are studying how
to use these light frequencies to transmit data because of its tremendous
potential for boosting the speeds of devices such as internet modems or cell
phones.
Nahata
and Vardeny uncovered an important piece of that puzzle: By depositing a
special form of multilayer perovskite onto a silicon wafer, they can modulate
terahertz waves passing through it using a simple halogen lamp. Modulating the
amplitude of terahertz radiation is important because it is how data in such a
communications system would be transmitted.
Previous
attempts to do this have usually required the use of an expensive, high-power
laser. What makes this demonstration different is that it is not only the lamp
power that allows for this modulation but also the specific color of the light.
Consequently, they can put different perovskites on the same silicon substrate,
where each region could be controlled by different colors from the lamp. This
is not easily possible when using conventional semiconductors like silicon.
“Think
of it as the difference between something that is binary versus something that
has 10 steps,” Nahata explains about what this new structure can do. “Silicon
responds only to the power in the optical beam but not to the color. It gives
you more capabilities to actually do something, say for information processing
or whatever the case may be.”
Not
only does this open the door to turning terahertz technologies into a reality —
resulting in next-generation communications systems and computing that is a
thousand times faster — but the process of layering perovskites on silicon is
simple and inexpensive by using a method called “spin casting,” in which the
material is deposited on the silicon wafer by spinning the wafer and allowing
centrifugal force to spread the perovskite evenly.
Vardeny
says what’s unique about the type of perovskite they are using is that it is
both an inorganic material like rock but also organic like a plastic, making it
easy to deposit on silicon while also having the optical properties necessary
to make this process possible.
“It’s a
mismatch,” he said. “What we call a ‘hybrid.’”
Nahata
says it’s probably at least another 10 years before terahertz technology for
communications and computing is used in commercial products, but this new
research is a significant milestone to getting there.
“This
basic capability is an important step towards getting a full-fledged
communications system,” Nahata says. “If you want to go from what you’re doing
today using a modem and standard wireless communications, and then go to a
thousand times faster, you’re going to have to change the technology
dramatically.”
The
paper was co-authored by students, Ashish Chanana, Yaxin Zhai, Sangita Baniya
and Chuang Zhang.
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