Boston College physicists (L-R) Krzysztof Kempa, Michael Naughton, Jakub Rybczynski, and Zhifeng Ren are involved in the nanocoax project. (Photo by Gary Gilbert)
Nanocoax Research Could Lead to New Technologies
By Greg Frost
Staff Writer
Physicists at Boston College have beamed visible light
through a cable hundreds of times smaller than a human
hair, an achievement they anticipate will lead to advances
in solar power and optical computing.
The discovery, details of which appear in the Jan. 8
issue of the journal Applied Physics Letters, defies
a key principle that holds that light cannot pass through
a hole much smaller than its wavelength. In fact, the
BC team forced visible light, which has a wavelength
of between 380-750 nanometers, to travel down a cable
whose diameter is smaller than even the low end of
that range.
The researchers say their achievement opens the door
to a wide array of new technologies, from high-efficiency,
inexpensive solar cells to microscopic light-based
switching devices for use in optical computing. The
technology could even be used to help some blind people
see, the physicists say.
The advance builds upon the researchers' earlier invention
of a microscopic antenna that captures visible light
in much the same way radio antennae capture radio waves
- a discovery they announced in 2004. This time, the
BC physicists designed and built a tiny version of
the coaxial cable - the Information Age workhorse that
carries telephone and Internet service along with hundreds
of television and radio channels into millions of homes
and businesses around the world.
"Our coax works just like the one in your house,
except now for visible light," says Jakub Rybczynski,
a research scientist in the Physics Department and
the article's lead author.
Coaxial cables are typically made up of a core wire
surrounded by a layer of insulation, which in turn
is surrounded by another metal sheath. This structure
encloses energy and lets the cable transmit electromagnetic
signals with wavelengths much larger than the diameter
of the cable itself.
With this design in mind, the physicists developed what
they called a "nanocoax" - a carbon nanotube-based
coaxial cable with a diameter of about 300 nanometers.
By comparison, the human hair is several hundred times
wider.
The physicists designed their nanocoax so that the center
wire protruded at one end, forming a light antenna.
The other end was blunt, allowing the scientists to
measure the light received by the antenna and transmitted
through the medium.
The researchers were able to transmit both red and green
light into the nanocoax and out the other end, indicating
that the cable can carry a broad spectrum of visible
light.
"The beauty of our nanocoax is that it lets us
squeeze visible light through very small geometric
dimensions. It also allows us to transmit light over
a distance that is at least 10 times its wavelength,"
says Prof. Kris Kempa (Physics), a co-author of the
article.
Other co-authors include BC Physics professors Michael
Naughton and Zhifeng Ren and Laboratory Director and
Lect. Andrzej Herczynski, as well as graduate student
Yang Wang of BC, Zhongping Huang and Dong Cai of NanoLab
Inc. in Newton, and Michael Giersig of the Center for
Advanced European Studies and Research in Bonn, Germany.
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