Wednesday, September 10, 2025
Science
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • HOME
  • SCIENCE NEWS
  • CONTACT US
  • HOME
  • SCIENCE NEWS
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
Scienmag
No Result
View All Result
Home Science News Chemistry

Tiny new lasers fill a long-standing gap in the rainbow of visible-light colors, opening new applications

August 29, 2024
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
Color Series
65
SHARES
593
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Tiny New Lasers Fill a Long-Standing Gap in the Rainbow of Visible-Light Colors, Opening New Applications

Color Series

Credit: S. Kelley/NIST

Tiny New Lasers Fill a Long-Standing Gap in the Rainbow of Visible-Light Colors, Opening New Applications

  • Scientists have made small red and blue lasers for years, but other colors have been a challenge.
  • Researchers have filled an important technology gap by creating orange, yellow and green lasers tiny enough to fit on a chip.
  • Low-noise, compact lasers in this wavelength range are important for quantum sensing, communications and information processing.

It’s not easy making green.

For years, scientists have fabricated small, high-quality lasers that generate red and blue light. However, the method they typically employ — injecting electric current into semiconductors — hasn’t worked as well in building tiny lasers that emit light at yellow and green wavelengths. Researchers refer to the dearth of stable, miniature lasers in this region of the visible-light spectrum as the “green gap.” Filling this gap opens new opportunities in underwater communications, medical treatments and more.

Green laser pointers have existed for 25 years, but they produce light only in a narrow spectrum of green and are not integrated in chips where they could work together with other devices to perform useful tasks.

Now scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have closed the green gap by modifying a tiny optical component: a ring-shaped microresonator, small enough to fit on a chip.

A miniature source of green laser light could improve underwater communication because water is nearly transparent to blue-green wavelengths in most aquatic environments. Other potential applications are in full-color laser projection displays and laser treatment of medical conditions, including diabetic retinopathy, a proliferation of blood vessels in the eye.

Compact lasers in this wavelength range are also important for applications in quantum computing and communication, as they could potentially store data in qubits, the fundamental unit of quantum information. Currently, these quantum applications depend on lasers that are larger in size, weight and power, limiting their ability to be deployed outside the laboratory.

For several years, a team led by Kartik Srinivasan of NIST and the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI), a research partnership between NIST and the University of Maryland, has used microresonators composed of silicon nitride to convert infrared laser light into other colors. When infrared light is pumped into the ring-shaped resonator, the light circles thousands of times until it reaches intensities high enough to interact strongly with the silicon nitride. That interaction, known as an optical parametric oscillation (OPO), produces two new wavelengths of light, called the idler and the signal.

In previous studies, the researchers generated a few individual colors of visible laser light. Depending on the dimensions of the microresonator, which determine the colors of light that are generated, scientists produced red, orange and yellow wavelengths, as well as a wavelength of 560 nanometers, right at the hairy edge between yellow and green light. However, the team could not generate the full complement of yellow and green colors necessary to fill the green gap.

“We didn’t want to be good at hitting just a couple of wavelengths,” said NIST scientist Yi Sun, a collaborator on the new study. “We wanted to access the entire range of wavelengths in the gap.”

To fill the gap, the team modified the microresonator in two ways. First, the scientists slightly thickened it. By changing its dimensions, the researchers more easily generated light that penetrated deeper into the green gap, to wavelengths as short as 532 nanometers (billionths of a meter). With this extended range, the researchers covered the entire gap.

In addition, the team exposed the microresonator to more air by etching away some of the silicon dioxide layer below it. This had the effect of making the output colors less sensitive to the microring dimensions and the infrared pump wavelength. The lower sensitivity gave the researchers more control in generating slightly different green, yellow, orange and red wavelengths from their device.

As a result, the researchers found they could create more than 150 distinct wavelengths across the green gap and fine-tune them. “Previously, we could make big changes — red to orange to yellow to green — in the laser colors we could generate with OPO, but it was hard to make small adjustments within each of those color bands,” Srinivasan noted.

The scientists are now working to boost the energy efficiency with which they produce the green-gap laser colors. Currently, the output power is only a few percent of that of the input laser. Better coupling between the input laser and the waveguide that channels the light into the microresonator, along with better methods of extracting the generated light, could significantly improve the efficiency.

The researchers, who include Jordan Stone and Xiyuan Lu from JQI, along with Zhimin Shi from Meta’s Reality Labs Research in Redmond, Washington, reported their findings August 21 online in Light: Science and Applications.


Paper:

Yi Sun, Jordan Stone, Xiyuan Lu, Feng Zhou, Junyeob Song, Zhimin Shi and Kartik Srinivasan. Advancing on-chip Kerr optical parametric oscillation towards coherent applications covering the green gap. Light: Science and Applications. Published online Aug. 21, 2024. DOI: 10.1038/s41377-024-01534-x.



Journal

Light Science & Applications

DOI

10.1038/s41377-024-01534-x

Method of Research

Experimental study

Subject of Research

Not applicable

Article Title

Advancing on-chip Kerr optical parametric oscillation towards coherent applications covering the green gap

Article Publication Date

21-Aug-2024

COI Statement

None

Share26Tweet16
Previous Post

Princeton graduate student wins prestigious plasma physics award

Next Post

Oxidative damage riggers micronuclear collapse mechanisms in cancer, two studies report

Related Posts

blank
Chemistry

Modular Organocatalysis Creates BN Isosteres via Wolff Rearrangement

September 10, 2025
blank
Chemistry

Oxford AI Tool Revolutionizes Supernova Discovery Amidst Cosmic Noise

September 9, 2025
blank
Chemistry

Innovative Methods for Generating Methanol Using Electricity and Biomass

September 9, 2025
blank
Chemistry

Isotope Tafel Analysis Reveals Proton Transfer Kinetics

September 9, 2025
blank
Chemistry

Gemini South Uncovers Elusive Cloud-Forming Chemical on Ancient Brown Dwarf

September 9, 2025
blank
Chemistry

Physical Neural Networks: Pioneering Sustainable AI for the Future

September 9, 2025
Next Post

Oxidative damage riggers micronuclear collapse mechanisms in cancer, two studies report

  • Mothers who receive childcare support from maternal grandparents show more parental warmth, finds NTU Singapore study

    Mothers who receive childcare support from maternal grandparents show more parental warmth, finds NTU Singapore study

    27547 shares
    Share 11016 Tweet 6885
  • University of Seville Breaks 120-Year-Old Mystery, Revises a Key Einstein Concept

    963 shares
    Share 385 Tweet 241
  • Bee body mass, pathogens and local climate influence heat tolerance

    643 shares
    Share 257 Tweet 161
  • Researchers record first-ever images and data of a shark experiencing a boat strike

    511 shares
    Share 204 Tweet 128
  • Warm seawater speeding up melting of ‘Doomsday Glacier,’ scientists warn

    314 shares
    Share 126 Tweet 79
Science

Embark on a thrilling journey of discovery with Scienmag.com—your ultimate source for cutting-edge breakthroughs. Immerse yourself in a world where curiosity knows no limits and tomorrow’s possibilities become today’s reality!

RECENT NEWS

  • Faulty RNA Splicing Hinders Liver Repair in Alcoholism
  • High-Mobility Group Box 1: Biomarker and Therapy in Neonatal Encephalopathy
  • Giant Two-Photon Upconversion in 2D Plasmonic Nanocavity
  • Mount Sinai Morningside Launches Advanced Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Featuring Cutting-Edge Technologies

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Athmospheric
  • Biology
  • Blog
  • Bussines
  • Cancer
  • Chemistry
  • Climate
  • Earth Science
  • Marine
  • Mathematics
  • Medicine
  • Pediatry
  • Policy
  • Psychology & Psychiatry
  • Science Education
  • Social Science
  • Space
  • Technology and Engineering

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 5,182 other subscribers

© 2025 Scienmag - Science Magazine

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • SCIENCE NEWS
  • CONTACT US

© 2025 Scienmag - Science Magazine

Discover more from Science

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading