Scientists Develop the Smallest Known Method to Guide Light: 2D Optical Waveguides

Scientists Develop the Smallest Known Method to Guide Light: 2D Optical Waveguides

Directing light from place⁤ to the place is the backbone‍ of our modern ​world. Beneath the oceans and across continents, fiber optic cables carry light that encodes everything from YouTube ⁢videos to banking transmissions—all inside strands about the ‍size of a hair.

University of Chicago Prof.‍ Jiwoong Park, however, wondered what would happen if you ​made even thinner and flatter strands—in ⁢effect, so thin that they’re actually 2D instead of 3D. What would happen to the ‍light?

Through a series ⁣of innovative⁢ experiments, he and his⁤ team found that a sheet of glass crystal just a few atoms thick could trap‍ and carry light. Not ‌only⁤ that, but it was surprisingly efficient and could travel relatively long distances—up to a centimeter, which is very far in the world of light-based computing.

The research, published in Science, demonstrates what are essentially 2D photonic circuits, and could open paths to‍ new technology.

“We were utterly surprised by how powerful this super-thin crystal is;‍ not only can it⁣ hold energy, but deliver it a thousand times further than anyone has seen in similar systems,” said lead study author‍ Jiwoong Park, a professor and chair of chemistry and faculty member of ⁤the James Franck Institute and Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering. “The trapped light ⁤also behaved like it is traveling in a 2D⁤ space.”

2023-08-13 01:24:03
Original from phys.org

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