Engineers at the University of Utah have demonstrated "an early step"
towards creating superfast computers that run on far-infrared light instead of
electricity.
The experiments involved the construction of the equivalent of wires that
carry and bend this form of light, also known as terahertz radiation.
"We have taken a first step to making circuits that can harness or guide
terahertz radiation," said Ajay Nahata, study leader and associate professor of
electrical and computer engineering at Utah.
"Eventually, in a minimum of 10 years, this will allow the development of
superfast circuits, computers and communications."
Electricity is carried through metal wires, but light used for communication
is transmitted through fibre optic cables and split into different colours, or
'channels' of information, using devices called waveguides.
In a study to be published in Optics Express, Nahata outlines how
the team designed stainless steel foil sheets with perforations that
successfully served as "wire-like waveguides" to transmit, bend, split or
combine terahertz radiation.
"A waveguide is something that allows you to transport electromagnetic
radiation from one point to another point, or distribute it across a circuit,"
Nahata explained.
However, if terahertz radiation is to be used in computing and communication,
it needs to be processed as well as transmitted from one device to another.
"This is where terahertz circuits are important. The long-term goal is to
create circuits that run faster than modern-day electronic circuits so we can
have faster computers and faster data transfer via the internet," Nahata said.
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