Australian researchers are one step closer to creating next-gen optical technologies – essential components for a high-speed internet.
A team from RMIT University has created a breakthrough chip for the nano-manipulation of light, paving the way future development of a high-speed internet.
Not only does this lay the foundation for the future ultra-broadband Big Data industry and providing a new platform for the next industry revolution, but the research also offers a precise new method for improving scientific knowledge of black holes.
Led by Professor Min Gu, the team designed an integrated nanophotonic chip that can achieve unparalleled levels of control over the angular momentum (AM) of light.
The pioneering work opens new opportunities for using AM at a chip-scale for the generation, transmission, processing and recording of information, and could also be used to better understand the evolution and nature of black holes.
While traveling approximately in a straight line, a beam of light also spins and twists around its optical axis. The AM of light, which measures the amount of that dynamic rotation, has attracted tremendous research interest in recent decades.
A key focus is the potential of using AM to enable the mass expansion of the available capacity of optical fibres through the use of parallel light channels – an approach known as ‘multiplexing’. But realising AM multiplexing on a chip scale has remained a major challenge, as there is no material in nature capable of sensing twisted light.
“By designing a series of elaborate nano-apertures and nano-grooves on the photonic chip, our team has enabled the on-chip manipulation of twisted light for the first time,” Gu said.
“The design removes the need for any other bulky interference-based optics to detect the AM signals.”
“Our discovery could open up truly compact on-chip AM applications such as ultra-high definition display, ultra-high capacity optical communication and ultra-secure optical encryption.
“It could also be extended to characterise the AM properties of gravitational waves to help us gain more information on how black holes interact with each other in the universe.”
The team devised nano-grooves to couple AM-carrying beams into different plasmonic AM fields, with the nano-apertures subsequently sorting and transmitting the different plasmonic AM signals.
Lead author Haoran Ren, a PhD candidate at Swinburne University of Technology, said: “If you send an optical data signal to a photonic chip, it is critical to know where the data is going, otherwise information will be lost.
“Our specially-designed nanophotonic chip can precisely guide AM data signals so they are transmitted from different mode-sorting nano-ring slits without losing any information.”
Gu, Associate Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research Innovation and Entrepreneurship at RMIT, and Node Director of the Australian Research Council’s Centre for Ultrahigh-bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems, said the work offered the possibility of full control over twisted light, including both spin angular momentum (SAM) and orbital angular momentum (OAM).
“Due to the fact that rotating black holes can impart OAM associated with gravitational waves, an unambiguous measuring of the OAM through the sky could lead to a more profound understanding of the evolution and nature of black holes in the universe,” he said.