Enable breadcrumbs token at /includes/pageheader.html.twig

Bandwidth Gem

A team led by Sandia National Laboratories scientists has created a tunable plasmonic crystal that could increase the bandwidth of high-speed communication networks and enhance high-speed electronics. The researchers accomplished the effect by making the plasma-containing crystal agile in transmitting terahertz light at varying frequencies.

A team led by Sandia National Laboratories scientists has created a tunable plasmonic crystal that could increase the bandwidth of high-speed communication networks and enhance high-speed electronics. The researchers accomplished the effect by making the plasma-containing crystal agile in transmitting terahertz light at varying frequencies. “Usually, electromagnetically induced transparencies in more widely known systems like atomic gases, photonic crystals and metamaterials require tuning a laser’s frequencies to match a physical system,” the scientists explain. “Here, we tune our system to match the radiation source. It’s inverting the problem, in a sense.”

The method could be used to reduce the size of photonic crystals, which are built to allow transmission of specific wavelengths and to develop tunable metamaterials that require micron- or nano-size bumps to tailor interactions between man-made structures and light. The crystal’s electron plasma forms naturally at the interface of semiconductors with different band gaps. As the plasma moves, a crystal forms between the atomically smooth boundaries. Patterned metal electrodes can reconfigure the properties, which alters its light transmission range.

Comments

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.