Germanium lasers offer ray of hope for optical computing
Bandwidth scarcity, is there any more pressing global issue that we're
faced with today? We think not. Given the exponential growth in both
computing power and software's exploitation and expectation of greater
resources, it's no surprise that at some point we'll have to look beyond
simple electrical currents as the transporters of our data. One bold
step taken in that direction has been the demonstration of an
operational germanium-on-silicon laser by researchers at MIT. By
tweaking the electron count in germanium atoms with the help of some
added phosphorous, they've been able to coax them into a
photon-emitting state of being -- something nobody thought possible
with indirect bandgap semiconductors. Perhaps the best part of this is
that germanium can be integrated relatively easily into current
manufacturing processes, meaning that light-based internal
communication within our computers is now at least a tiny bit closer to
becoming a reality.
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