New nanomaterial promises 2 GB data speed per second
Scientists
develop visible-light communication tech that transmits info
Jeddah, August
15:
Scientists
have developed a new material that may not only provide efficient lighting, but
also power wireless internet with data speed of up to 2 GB per second.
Researchers
from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) in Saudi Arabia
developed the new nanocrystalline material that rapidly makes white light out
of blue light.
While
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are now well established technologies, there are several
advantages gained by shortening the wavelength of the electromagnetic waves
used for transmitting information.
Visible-light
communication (VLC) makes use of parts of the electromagnetic spectrum that are
unregulated and is potentially more energy-efficient, researchers said. VCL
also offers a way to combine information transmission with illumination and
display technologies — for example, using ceiling lights to provide internet
connections to laptops, they said.
Many
such VLC applications require light-emitting diodes (LEDs) that produce white
light. These are usually fabricated by combining a diode that emits blue light
with phosphorous that turns some of this radiation into red and green light.
However,
this conversion process is not fast enough to match the speed at which the LED
can be switched on and off. “VLC using white light generated in this way is
limited to about one hundred million bits per second,” said Boon Ooi, a
professor at KAUST. Researchers instead used a nanocrystal-based converter that
enables much higher data rates.
They
created nanocrystals of cesium lead bromide that were roughly eight nanometres
in size using a simple and cost-effective solution-based method that
incorporated a conventional nitride phosphor.
When
illuminated by a blue laser light, the nanocrystals emitted green light while
the nitride emitted red light.
Together,
these combined to create a warm white light.
Researchers
characterised the optical properties of their material using femtosecond
transient spectroscopy.
They
were able to show that the optical processes in cesium lead bromide
nanocrystals occur on a time-scale of roughly seven nanoseconds.
This
meant they could modulate the optical emission at a frequency of 491 Megahertz,
40 times faster than is possible using phosphorus, and transmit data at a rate
of two billion bits per second, researchers said.
The
research was published in the journal ACS Photonics.
VCL
also offers a way to combine information transmission with illumination and
display technologies — for example, using ceiling lights to provide internet
connections to laptops.
Source | Business Line | 16 August 2016
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