University of Washington scientists build a nanolaser using a single atomic sheet
![]() |
The ultra-thin semiconductor, which is about 100,000
times thinner than a human hair, stretches across the top of the photonic
cavity.U of Washington
University of Washington (UW) scientists have built a new
nanometer-sized laser — using the thinnest semiconductor available today — that
is energy efficient, easy to build and compatible with existing electronics.
Lasers play essential roles in countless technologies,
from medical therapies to metal cutters to electronic gadgets. But to meet
modern needs in computation, communications, imaging and sensing, scientists
are striving to create ever-smaller laser systems that also consume less
energy.
The UW nanolaser, developed in collaboration with
Stanford University, uses a tungsten-based semiconductor only three atoms thick
as the “gain material” that emits light. The technology is described in a paper
published in the March
16 online edition of Nature.
“This is a recently discovered, new type of semiconductor
which is very thin and emits light efficiently,” said Sanfeng Wu, lead author
and a UW doctoral candidate in physics. “Researchers are making transistors,
light-emitting diodes, and solar cells based on this material because of its
properties. And now, nanolasers.”
Nanolasers — which are so small they can’t be seen with
the eye — have the potential to be used in a wide range of applications from
next-generation computing to implantable microchips that monitor health
problems. But nanolasers so far haven’t strayed far from the research lab.
Other nanolaser designs use gain materials that are
either much thicker or that are embedded in the structure of the cavity that
captures light. That makes them difficult to build and to integrate with modern
electrical circuits and computing technologies.
The UW version, instead, uses a flat sheet that can be
placed directly on top of a commonly used optical cavity, a tiny cave that
confines and intensifies light. The ultrathin nature of the semiconductor —
made from a single layer of a tungsten-based molecule — yields efficient
coordination between the two key components of the laser.
The UW nanolaser requires only 27 nanowatts to kickstart
its beam, which means it is very energy efficient.
Other advantages of the UW team’s nanolaser are that it
can be easily fabricated, and it can potentially work with silicon components
common in modern electronics. Using a separate atomic sheet as the gain
material offers versatility and the opportunity to more easily manipulate its properties.
“You can think of it as the difference between a cell phone where the SIM card is embedded into the phone versus one that’s removable,” said co-author Arka Majumdar, UW assistant professor of electrical engineering and of physics.
“When you’re working with other materials, your gain medium is embedded and you can’t change it. In our nanolasers, you can take the monolayer out or put it back, and it’s much easier to change around,” he said.
The researchers hope this and other
recent innovations will enable them to produce an electrically-driven
nanolaser that could open the door to using light, rather than electrons, to
transfer information between computer chips and boards.
The current process can cause systems to overheat and
wastes power, so companies such as Facebook, Oracle, HP, Google and Intel with
massive data centers are keenly interested in more energy-efficient solutions.
Using photons rather than electrons to transfer that
information would consume less energy and could enable next-generation
computing that breaks current bandwidth and power limitations. The recently
proven UW nanolaser technology is one step toward making optical computing and short
distance optical communication a reality.
“We all want to make devices run faster with less energy consumption, so we need new technologies,” said co-author Xiaodong Xu, UW associate professor of materials science and engineering and of physics. “The real innovation in this new approach of ours, compared to the old nanolasers, is that we’re able to have scalability and more controls.”
Still, there’s more work to be done in the near future,
Xu said. Next steps include investigating photon statistics to establish the
coherent properties of the laser’s light.
Co-authors are John Schaibley of the UW, Liefeng Feng of
the UW and Tianjin University in China, Sonia Buckley and Jelena Vuckovic of
Stanford University, Jiaqiang Yan and David G. Mandrus of Oak Ridge National
Laboratory and the University of Tennessee, Fariba Hatami of Humboldt
University in Berlin and Wang Yao of the University of Hong Kong.
Primary funding came from the Air Force Office of
Scientific Research. Other funders include the National Science Foundation, the
state of Washington through the Clean Energy Institute, the Presidential Early
Award for Scientists and Engineers administered through the Office of Naval
Research, the U.S. Department of Energy, and the European Commission.
For more information, contact Xu at xuxd@uw.edu and Majumdar at arka@uw.edu.
Grant numbers: AFOSR (FA9550-14-1-0277),
NSF-EFRI-1433496, ECS-9731293, N00014-08-1-0561, FP7-ICT-2013-613024-GRASP
