Graphene Photodetector Integrated Into Computer Chip
7 replies, posted
[url]http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/09/130916090844.htm[/url]
[IMG]http://images.sciencedaily.com/2013/09/130916090844.jpg?1379344124[/IMG]
[QUOTE][B]Today, most information is transmitted by light -- for example, in optical fibres. Computer chips, however, work electronically. Somewhere between the optical data highway and the electronic chips, photons have to be converted into electrons using light-detectors. Scientists at the Vienna University of Technology have now managed to combine a graphene photodetector with a standard silicon chip. It can transform light of all important frequencies used in telecommunications into electrical signals.[/B]
Both academia and the industry place high hopes in graphene. The material, which consists of a single layer of hexagonally arranged carbon atoms, has extraordinary properties. Two years ago, the team around Thomas Müller (Institute of Photonics, Vienna University of Technology) demonstrated that graphene is ideally suited to turn light into electrical current. "There are many materials that can transform light into electrical signals, but graphene allows for a particularly fast conversion," says Thomas Müller. So wherever large amounts of data are to be transmitted in a short period of time, graphene will in the future probably be the material of choice.
The researchers had to come a long way from the basic proof of what the material can do to actually using it in a chip -- but now they succeeded. The Viennese team worked together with researchers from the Johannes Kepler University in Linz.
"A narrow waveguide with a diameter of about 200 by 500 nanometers carries the optical signal to the graphene layer. There, the light is converted into an electrical signal, which can then be processed in the chip," Thomas Müller explains.
The graphene photodetector is not only extremely fast, it can also be built in a particularly compact way. 20 000 detectors could fit onto a single chip with a surface area of one square centimetre. Theoretically, the chip could be supplied with data via 20 000 different information channels.
"These technologies are not only important for transmitting data over large distances. Optical data transmission also becomes more and more important for communication within computers," says Thomas Müller. When large computer clusters work with many processor cores at the same time, a lot of information has to be transferred between the cores. As graphene allows switching between optical and electrical signals very quickly, this data can be exchanged optically. This speeds up the data exchange and requires much less electrical energy.[/QUOTE]
Remember folks a computer is only as fast as it's slowest part, making bus speeds faster means processors, ram, memory, etc. can become faster too!
In a few years, you will be able to troll people by flashing a camera flash into their case and crash their computer.
[QUOTE=Awesomecaek;42215663]In a few years, you will be able to troll people by flashing a camera flash into their case and crash their computer.[/QUOTE]
I don't think fiber optics work that way!
batteries
armor
computer busses
transistors
cables
what can't graphene do
[QUOTE=Whiterfire;42216406]batteries
armor
computer busses
transistors
cables
what can't graphene do[/QUOTE]
Cure cancer
I was joking in the [I]spider silk/carbon nanotube[/I] thread about a 'tech research buzzwords' bingo game but I'm thinking Sensationalist Headlines would really benefit from a full gameboard.
[QUOTE=Whiterfire;42216406]batteries
armor
computer busses
transistors
cables
what can't graphene do[/QUOTE]
your daddy?
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