Deutsch

Harvard University and University of Vienna invented tunable laser chips

63
2025-07-16 14:42:00
Übersetzung anzeigen

Researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and Vienna University of Technology (TU Wien) have invented a new type of tunable semiconductor laser that shows smooth, reliable, wide-range wavelength tuning in a simple, chip-sized design.
Tunable lasers are integral to many technologies, from high-speed telecommunications to medical diagnostics to safety inspections of gas pipelines. Yet laser technology faces many tradeoffs – for example, lasers that emit across a wide range of wavelengths sacrifice the accuracy of each wavelength. They can also depend on complicated and expensive designs because they commonly require moving parts.

Artist’s illustration of the new tunable ring laser.

The Harvard and Vienna developers new device could “one day replace many types of tunable lasers in a smaller, more cost-effective package.”

The associated research has been published in Optica. It was co-led by Federico Capasso, the Robert L. Wallace Professor of Applied Physics and Vinton Hayes Senior Research Fellow in Electrical Engineering at SEAS, and Prof. Benedikt Schwarz at TU Wien.

‘More commercially relevant wavelengths’

The researchers have initially demonstrated a laser that emits light in the mid-infrared wavelength range because that is where quantum cascade lasers, upon which their architecture is based, typically emit. “The versatility of this new platform means that similar lasers can be fabricated at more commercially relevant wavelengths, such as for telecommunications applications, for medical diagnostics, or for any laser that emits in the visible spectrum of light,” said Capasso, who co-invented the quantum cascade laser in 1994.

The new laser consists of multiple tiny ring-shaped lasers, each a slightly different size, and all connected to the same waveguide. Each ring emits light of a different wavelength, and by adjusting electric current input, the laser can smoothly tune between different wavelengths. The clever and compact design ensures the laser emits only one wavelength at a time, remains stable even in harsh environments, and can be easily scaled. The rings function either one at a time or all together to make a stronger beam.

“By adjusting the size of the ring, we can effectively target any line we want, and any lasing frequency we want,” said co-lead author Theodore Letsou, an MIT graduate student and research fellow in Capasso’s lab at Harvard. “All the light from every single laser gets coupled through the same waveguide and is formed into the same beam. This is quite powerful, because we can extend the tuning range of typical semiconductor lasers, and we can target individual wavelengths using a different ring radius.”

“What’s really nice about our laser is the simplicity of fabrication,” added co-lead author Johannes Fuchsberger, a graduate student at TU Wien, where the team fabricated the devices using the cleanroom facilities permanently provided by the school’s Center for Micro and Nanostructures. “We have no mechanically movable parts and an easy fabrication scheme that results in a small footprint.”

The new ring laser could possibly replace current technologies for different types of tunable semiconductor lasers that each have strengths and drawbacks depending on the application. For example, distributed feedback lasers make smooth and accurate beams and are therefore used in telecommunications fiber to send optical signals long distances, but their tuning range is narrow.

External cavity lasers, on the other hand, have broader tuning ranges but more complex designs and moving parts, which makes their laser lines tend to skip around. These are commonly used in gas sensors that test for leaks in pipelines, because they can detect gases like methane and carbon dioxide which absorb light at distinct wavelengths.

Source: optics.org

Ähnliche Empfehlungen
  • Diamond Light Source and NPL reach a new five-year agreement

    Recently, two leading UK scientific institutions, Diamond Light Source and National Physical Laboratory (NPL), have reached a new five-year agreement to promote joint collaborative efforts.The agreement was approved by signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), which will bring these two institutions together.Diamond Light Source is a national synchrotron facility in the UK known for generating ...

    2024-04-25
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • 3D printing giant Materialise reorganizes

    Recently, the stock price of Materialise, a well-known company in the 3D printing industry, plummeted by 35% overnight. This news was like a heavy bomb, instantly causing a storm in the industry! What exactly happened to Materialise, which was originally developing steadily? Why has there been such a significant drop in stock prices? Today, let's delve into the reasons behind this.The truth behind...

    03-03
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Overview of ultrafast laser micro nano manufacturing technology: material processing, surface/interface control, and device manufacturing

    Researchers from Tsinghua University have summarized the research on ultrafast laser micro nano manufacturing technology, including material processing, surface/interface control, and device manufacturing. The relevant review titled "A Review of Ultrafast Laser Micro/Nano Fabric: Material Processing, Surface/Interface Control, and Device Fabric" was published in Nano Research.Ultra fast laser proc...

    2024-08-06
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • The world's first tunable wavelength blue semiconductor laser

    Recently, researchers from Osaka University in Japan have developed the world's first compact, wavelength tunable blue semiconductor laser in a new study. This breakthrough paves the way for far ultraviolet light technology and brings enormous potential for applications such as virus inactivation and bacterial disinfection. The research results have been published in the journal Applied Physics Le...

    2024-11-23
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Japan and Germany jointly develop ultra high speed laser material deposition technology

    Makino Machine Tool Company, headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, and Fraunhofer Institute for Laser Technology (ILT), headquartered in Aachen, Germany, have collaborated to combine ultra-high speed laser material deposition (EHLA) and near net shape additive manufacturing (EHLA3D) with a five axis CNC platform. The new system developed can efficiently produce, coat, or repair complex geometric shapes o...

    2024-10-25
    Übersetzung anzeigen