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Science & Tech
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Far reaching implications for telecommunications
TWO UNIVERSITY of Toronto physicists have spiralled a new twist
out of the old subject of optics by creating a blueprint for a
photonic crystal that paves the way for better, faster and
perhaps unprecedented optical devices.
In the journal Science, University of Toronto physics professor
Sajeev John and graduate student Ovidiu Toader report that they
have created a blueprint of a three-dimensional photonic bandgap
crystal that opens a new door for the development of devices like
all- optical micro-transistors, optical wavelength converters and
other components for optical microchips. They say it is a simple
design that has potentially far-reaching implications for the
networking and telecommunications industry.
"In terms of making a material that's three-dimensional with a
large photonic bandgap, there's been a bottleneck in the field
over the past 10 years," says John, who is also a Canada Research
Chair holder. "Other types of designs or blueprints for large
photonic bandgaps have been created but their production is so
complex or time consuming that for all intents and purposes they
are commercially unusable. Our blueprint can be mass-produced at
a very low cost, and that's the crux of the matter."
Research institutions around the world have been pouring vast
resources into photonics research. The reason: to break ground in
new methods and materials that will help us control and
manipulate light in ways similar to how semiconductor chips guide
the flow of electrons.
Light is currently used in fibre optic cable as a super-
efficient transmitter of information; in concentrated form, it is
also used as laser beams to perform delicate surgery or scan
compact discs or bar codes. John and Toader's new blueprint
allows optically based technology to be carried at the
microscopic level.
The physicists say their design should come as a surprise to
fellow scientists who didn't believe it was possible. "People
thought that to cover a broad wavelength range, photonic bandgap
materials had to resemble a diamond lattice," explains Toader.
"But diamond structures are very difficult to make because they
have very intricate three-dimensional designs. In the past,
scientists tried to mimic the diamond structure with something
called the 'woodpile' structure - looking something like a stack
of Lincoln logs - but they are extremely arduous to make.
The structure must be grown one layer at a time, and after
several years of work, they've only managed to grow about eight
layers." The photonic bandgap crystal design created by John and
Toader is based on something called a tetragonal lattice, like a
cubic lattice with spiralling posts that are stretched in one
direction. They say it is much easier to make and can be done by
a micro-fabrication technique known as glancing angle deposition
(GLAD), which means growing the spiralling posts in a one step
process.
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