Using 'miracle material'
graphene in telecommunications could dramatically make the internet a hundred
times faster, a new study has found. Researchers from the Universities of Bath and Exeter
have demonstrated for the first time incredibly short optical response rates
using graphene, which could pave the way for a revolution in
telecommunications. Every
day large amounts of information is transmitted and processed through
optoelectronic devices such as optical fibres, photodetectors and lasers.
Signals are sent by photons at infrared wavelengths and processed using optical
switches, which convert signals into a series of light pulses.
Ordinarily optical switches respond at rate of a
few picoseconds - around a trillionth of a second. Through this study
physicists have observed the response rate of an optical switch using 'few
layer graphene' to be around one hundred femtoseconds - nearly a hundred times
quicker than current materials. Graphene is just one atom thick, but remarkably strong. Scientists have
suggested that it would take an elephant, balanced on a pencil to break through
a single sheet. Already
dubbed a miracle material due to its strength, lightness, flexibility,
conductivity and low cost, it could now enter the market to dramatically
improve telecommunications, researchers said. "We've seen an ultrafast optical response rate,
using 'few-layer graphene', which has exciting applications for the development
of high speed optoelectronic components based on graphene," lead
researcher Dr Enrico Da Como said. "This fast response is in the infrared part of the electromagnetic
spectrum, where many applications in telecommunications, security and also
medicine are currently developing and affecting our society," said Da
Como. "The more we find
out about graphene the more remarkable its properties seem to be. This research
shows that it also has unique optical properties which could find important new
applications," Co-Director of the Centre for Graphene Science at Bath,
Professor Simon Bending added. In the long term this research could also lead to the development of
quantum cascade lasers based on graphene. Quantum cascade lasers are semiconductor lasers used
in pollution monitoring, security and spectroscopy. Few-layer graphene could
emerge as a unique platform for this interesting application.
No comments:
Post a Comment