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Published On: Jan 11, 2004 12:59 AM
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Let there be light!
...and make it transistorized!
New
light-emitting transistor could revolutionize electronics
industry

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Put the inventor of
the light-emitting diode and the maker of the world’s fastest transistor
together in a research laboratory and what kinds of bright ideas might surface?
One answer is a light-emitting transistor that could revolutionize the
electronics industry.Professors
Nick Holonyak Jr. and Milton Feng at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign have uncovered a light-emitting transistor that could make the
transistor the fundamental element in optoelectronics as well as in electronics.
The scientists report their discovery in the Jan. 5 issue of the journal Applied
Physics Letters.“We have
demonstrated light emission from the base layer of a heterojunction bipolar
transistor, and showed that the light intensity can be controlled by varying the
base current,” said Holonyak, a John Bardeen Professor ofElectrical and Computer
Engineering and Physics at Illinois. Holonyak invented the first
practical light-emitting diode and the first semiconductor laser to operate in
the visible
spectrum.“This work is
still in the early stage, so it is not yet possible to say what all the
applications will be,” Holonyak said. “But a light-emitting
transistor opens up a rich domain of integrated circuitry and high-speed signal
processing that involves both electrical signals and optical
signals.”A transistor
usually has two ports: one for input and one for output. “Our new device
has three ports: an input, an electrical output and an optical output,”
said Feng, the Holonyak Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineeringat Illinois.
“This means that we can interconnect optical and electrical signals for
display or communication purposes.” Feng is credited with creating the
world’s fastest bipolar transistor, a device that operates at a frequency
of 509 gigahertz.Graduate
student Walid Hafez fabricated the light-emitting transistor in the
university’s Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory. Unlike
traditional transistors, which are built from silicon and germanium, the
light-emitting transistors are made from indium gallium phosphide and gallium
arsenide.“In a bipolar
device, there are two kinds of injected carriers: negatively charged electrons
and positively charged holes,” Holonyak said. “Some of these
carriers will recombine rapidly, supported by a base current that is essential
for the normal transistor function.”
The recombination process in
indium gallium phosphide and gallium arsenide materials also creates infrared
photons, the “light” in the researchers’ light-emitting
transistors. “In the past, this base current has been regarded as a waste
current that generates unwanted heat,” Holonyak said. “We’ve
shown that for a certain type of transistor, the base current creates light that
can be modulated at transistor
speed.”Although the
recombination process is the same as that which occurs in
light-emitting diodes, the photons in
light-emitting transistors are generated under much higher speed conditions. So
far, the researchers have demonstrated the modulation of light emission in phase
with a base current in transistors operating at a frequency of 1 megahertz. Much
higher speeds are considered
certain.“At such speeds,
optical interconnects could replace electrical wiring between electronic
components on a circuit board,” Feng said. This work could be the
beginning of an era in which photons are directed around a chip in much the same
fashion as electrons have been maneuvered on conventional
chips.“In retrospect, we
could say the groundwork for this was laid more than 56 years ago with John
Bardeen and Walter Brattain and their first germanium transistor,” said
Holonyak, who was Bardeen’s first graduate student. “But the direct
recombination involving a photon is weak in germanium materials, and John and
Walter just wouldn’t have seen the light – even if they had looked.
If John were alive and we showed him this device, he would have to have a big
grin.”
Posted: Sun - January 11, 2004 at 12:44 AM
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