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News Article

Optical fibre with compound semiconductor core revealed

Penn State University has developed, what it claims, is the first new type of optical fibre that contains, at its core, a high-purity crystalline compound of zinc selenide (ZnSe).

 

A team of scientists led by John Badding, a professor of chemistry at Penn State University, has developed the new class of optical fibre, which allows for a more effective and liberal manipulation of light. The discovery opens up possibilities to a more versatile laser-radar technology.

 

ZnSe is a highly efficient light-yellow II-VI compound semiconductor with superior optical and electronic properties. 



 

Such technology could be applied to the development of improved surgical and medical lasers, better countermeasure lasers used by the military, and superior environment-sensing lasers such as those used to measure pollutants and to detect the dissemination of bioterrorist chemical agents. The team's research will be published in the journal Advanced Materials.

 

"It has become almost a cliché to say that optical fibres are the cornerstone of the modern information age," said Badding. "These long, thin fibres, which are three times as thick as a human hair, can transmit more than a terabyte, the equivalent of 250 DVDs , of information per second. Still, there always are ways to improve on existing technology."

 

Badding explained that optical-fibre technology always has been limited by the use of a glass core. "Glass has a haphazard arrangement of atoms," he said. "In contrast, a crystalline substance like zinc selenide is highly ordered. That order allows light to be transported over longer wavelengths, specifically those in the mid-infrared."

 

Unlike silica glass, which traditionally is used in optical fibres, ZnSe is a II-VI compound semiconductor. "We've known for a long time that zinc selenide is a useful compound, capable of manipulating light in ways that silica can't," Badding said. "The trick was to get this compound into a fibre structure, something that had never been done before."

 

Using an innovative high-pressure chemical-deposition technique developed by Justin Sparks, a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry, Badding and his team deposited ZnSe waveguiding cores inside of silica glass capillaries to form the new class of optical fibres. "The high-pressure deposition is unique in allowing formation of such long, thin, zinc selenide fibre cores in a very confined space," Badding said.

 

The scientists found that the optical fibres made of ZnSe could be useful in two ways. First, they observed that the new fibres were more efficient at converting light from one colour to another.

 

"When traditional optical fibres are used for signs, displays, and art, it's not always possible to get the colours you want," Badding explained. "Zinc selenide, using a process called nonlinear frequency conversion, is more capable of changing colours."

 

Second, as Badding and his team expected, they found that the new class of fibre provided more versatility not just in the visible spectrum, but also in the infrared; electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths longer than those of visible light.

 

Existing optical-fibre technology is inefficient at transmitting infrared light. However, the ZnSe optical fibres that Badding's team developed are able to transmit the longer wavelengths of infrared light.

 

"Exploiting these wavelengths is exciting because it represents a step toward making fibres that can serve as infrared lasers," Badding explained. "For example, the military currently uses laser-radar technology that can handle the near-infrared, or 2 to 2.5-micron range. A device capable of handling the mid-infrared, or over 5-micron range would be more accurate. The fibres we created can transmit wavelengths of up to 15 microns."

 

Badding also explained that the detection of pollutants and environmental toxins could be yet another application of better laser-radar technology capable of interacting with light of longer wavelengths.

 

"Different molecules absorb light of different wavelengths; for example, water absorbs, or stops, light at the wavelengths of 2.6 microns," Badding said. "But the molecules of certain pollutants or other toxic substances may absorb light of much longer wavelengths. If we can transport light over longer wavelengths through the atmosphere, we can see what substances are out there much more clearly."

 

In addition, Badding mentioned that ZnSe optical fibres also may open new avenues of research that could improve laser-assisted surgical techniques, such as corrective eye surgery.

 

In addition to Badding and Sparks, other researchers who contributed to this study include Rongrui He of Penn State's Department of Chemistry and the Materials Research Institute; Mahesh Krishnamurthi and Venkatraman Gopalan of Penn State's Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the Materials Research Institute; and Pier J.A. Sazio, Anna C. Peacock, and Noel Healy of the Optoelectronics Research Centre at the University of Southampton.

 

Support for this research was provided by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, the National Science Foundation, and the Penn State Materials Research Science and Engineering Centre.
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