Science fiction writers have long envisioned sailing a spacecraft by
the optical force of the sun’s light. But, the forces of sunlight
are too weak to fill even the oversized sails that have been tried. Now
a team led by researchers at the Yale School of Engineering &
Applied Science has shown that the force of light indeed can be
harnessed to drive machines — when the process is scaled to
nano-proportions.
Their work opens the door to a new class of semiconductor devices that
are operated by the force of light. They envision a future where this
process powers quantum information processing and sensing devices, as
well as telecommunications that run at ultra-high speed and consume
little power.
The research, appearing in the November 27 issue of Nature,
demonstrates a marriage of two emerging fields of research —
nanophotonics and nanomechanics. – which makes possible the
extreme miniaturization of optics and mechanics on a silicon chip.
Photonic circuit in which optical force is harnessed to drive nanomechanics.The energy of light has been harnessed and used in many ways. The
“force” of light is different — it is a push or a
pull action that causes something to move.
“While the force of light is far too weak for us to feel in
everyday life, we have found that it can be harnessed and used at the
nanoscale,” said team leader Hong Tang, assistant professor at
Yale. “Our work demonstrates the advantage of using nano-objects
as “targets” for the force of light — using devices
that are a billion-billion times smaller than a space sail, and that
match the size of today’s typical transistors.”
Until now light has only been used to maneuver single tiny objects with
a focused laser beam — a technique called “optical
tweezers.” Postdoctoral scientist and lead author, Mo Li noted,
“Instead of moving particles with light, now we integrate
everything on a chip and move a semiconductor device.”
“When researchers talk about optical forces, they are generally
referring to the radiation pressure light applies in the direction of
the flow of light,” said Tang. “The new force we have
investigated actually kicks out to the side of that light flow.”
While this new optical force was predicted by several theories, the
proof required state-of-the-art nanophotonics to confine light with
ultra-high intensity within nanoscale photonic wires. The researchers
showed that when the concentrated light was guided through a nanoscale
mechanical device, significant light force could be generated —
enough, in fact, to operate nanoscale machinery on a silicon chip.
The light force was routed in much the same way electronic wires are
laid out on today’s large scale integrated circuits. Because
light intensity is much higher when it is guided at the nanoscale, they
were able to exploit the force. “We calculate that the
illumination we harness is a million times stronger than direct
sunlight,” adds Wolfram Pernice, a Humboldt postdoctoral fellow
with Tang.
“We create hundreds of devices on a single chip, and all of them
work,” says Tang, who attributes this success to a great optical
I/O device design provided by their collaborators at the University of
Washington.
It took more than 60 years to progress from the first transistors to
the speed and power of today’s computers. Creating devices that
run solely on light rather than electronics will now begin a similar
process of development, according to the authors.
“While this development has brought us a new device concept and a
giant step forward in speed, the next developments will be in improving
the mechanical aspects of the system. But,” says Tang, “the
photon force is with us.”
Tang’s team at Yale also included graduate student Chi Xiong.
Collaborators at University of Washington were T. Baehr-Jones and M.
Hochberg. Funding in support of the project came from the National
Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the
Alexander von Humboldt post-doctoral fellowship program.
Citation: Nature (November 27, 2008)