Now, Just A
Blinkin' Picosecond!
NASA scientists are working to solve
the need for computer speed using light itself to
accelerate calculations and increase data bandwidth.
April
28, 2000 -- Watches tick in seconds. Basketball games
are timed in 10ths of a second, and drag racers in
100ths. Computers used to work in milliseconds
(1,000ths), then moved up to microseconds (millionths),
and now are approaching nanoseconds (billionths) for
logic operations - and picoseconds (trillionths!) for
the switches and gates in chips.
"That's great in theory,"
says Dr. Donald Frazier of NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center. "Except that electronic signals, even with
Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) and maximum
miniaturization, are bogged down by many aspects of the
solid materials they travel through. So we've had to
find a faster medium for the signals - and the answer
seems to be light itself!"
Above: Dr. Donald Frazier monitors a
blue laser light used with electro-optical materials.
Light travels at 186,000 miles per
second. That's 982,080,000 feet per second -- or
11,784,960,000 inches. In a billionth of a second, one
nanosecond, photons of light travel just a bit less than
a foot, not considering resistance in air or of an
optical fiber strand or thin film. Just right for doing
things very quickly in microminiaturized computer chips.
"Entirely optical computers are
still some time in the future," says Dr. Frazier,
"but electro-optical hybrids have been possible
since 1978, when it was learned that photons can respond
to electrons through media such as lithium niobate.
Newer advances have produced a variety of thin films and
optical fibers that make optical interconnections and
devices practical. We are focusing on thin films made of
organic molecules, which are more light sensitive than
inorganics. Organics can perform functions such as
switching, signal processing and frequency doubling
using less power than inorganics. Inorganics such as
silicon used with organic materials let us use both
photons and electrons in current hybrid systems, which
will eventually lead to all-optical computer
systems."
"What we are accomplishing in the
lab today will result in development of super-fast,
super-miniaturized, super-lightweight and lower cost
optical computing and optical communication devices and
systems," Frazier explained.
The speed of computers has now become
a pressing problem as electronic circuits reach their
miniaturization limit. The rapid growth of the Internet,
expanding at almost 15% per month, demands faster speeds
and larger bandwidths than electronic circuits can
provide. Electronic switching limits network speeds to
about 50 Gigabits per second (1 Gigabit (Gb) is 109, or
1 billion bits).
Dr. Hossin Abdeldayem, a member of
Frazier's optical technologies research group, states
that Terabit speeds (1 Terabit, abbreviated
"Tb", is 1012, or 1 trillion bits) are needed
to accommodate the growth rate of the Internet and the
increasing demand for bandwidth-intensive data streams.
Optical data processing can perform several operations
simultaneously (in parallel) much faster and easier than
electronics. This "parallelism" when
associated with fast switching speeds would result in
staggering computational power. For example, a
calculation that might take a conventional electronic
computer more than eleven years to complete could be
performed by an optical computer in a single hour.
"All-optical
switching using optical materials can relieve the
escalating problem of bandwidth limitations imposed by
electronics," says Dr. Abdeldayem. "In 1998,
Lucent Technologies introduced a lithographic submicron
technology to further miniaturize electronic circuits
and enhance computer speed. Additional miniaturization
of electronic components only provides a short-term
solution to the problem. There are also physical
problems accompanied by miniaturization that might
affect the computer's reliability. "
Drs. Frazier and Abdeldayem and their
group in Huntsville, AL, have designed and built
all-optical logic gate circuits for data processing at
Gigabit and Terabit rates, and they are also working on
a system for pattern recognition.
Left: Dr. Hossin Abdeldayem of
NASA/Marshall works with lasers to develop a system for
pattern recognition.
"We have also developed and
tested nanosecond optical switches, which can act as
computer logic gates," says Dr. Abdeldayem, who
recently presented the group's research paper entitled
"All-Optical Logic Gates for Optical
Computing" at The Pittsburgh Conference in New
Orleans, LA.
"Picosecond and nanosecond
all-optical switches, which act as AND and partial NAND
logic gates were demonstrated in our laboratory,"
explains Dr. Abdeldayem. "Such logic gates are
members of a large family of gates in computers that
perform logic operations such as addition, subtraction
and multiplication. They are vital for the development
of optical computing and optical communication. Our
all-optical logic gates were made using a thin film of
metal-free phthalocyanine compound and a polydiacetylene
polymer in a hollow fiber"
Optical Development Boom is
Worldwide
Photonics
development is booming worldwide in optics and optical
components for computing and other applications.
Estimates of global photonic technology sales in 1999
were as high as $100 billion and rising with the
ever-increasing demands of data traffic. KMI Corp.
reports data traffic growing at 100% per year worldwide,
while London's Phillips Group estimates that U.S. data
traffic will increase by 300% annually.
Right: Blue and red lasers reflecting
off mirrors -- a glimpse of things to come in computing
technology? Photo Credit: Department of Energy/Coherent
Inc Laser Group.
Most components now in demand are
electro-optical (EO) hybrids, which are limited by the
speed of their electronic parts. All-optical components
will have the advantage of speed over EO devices, but
there is a lack of efficient nonlinear optical (NLO)
materials that can respond at low power levels. Almost
all current all-optical components require a high level
of laser power to function as required.
Researchers from the University of
Southern California working with a team from the
University of California at Los Angeles have jointly
developed an organic polymer with a switching frequency
of 60 GHz -- three times faster than the current
industry-standard lithium niobate crystal-based devices.
Commercial development of such a device could
revolutionize the "information superhighway"
and speed data processing for optical computing.
Another group at Brown University and
IBM Corporation's Almaden Research Center in San Jose,
CA, have used ultrafast laser pulses to build ultrafast
data-storage devices, achieving switching down to 100ps
-- results that are almost ten times faster than
currently available "speed limits".
Left:
Dr. Steve Paley (NASA/Marshall) discusses the goals of
optical computing. Click
on the image for a brief RealVideo. The clip is also
available in QuickTime
format. Free players for QuickTime
or RealVideo content
are available from the vendors.
A European collaborative effort has
demonstrated high-speed optical data input and output in
free-space between IC chips in computers at a rate of
more than 1 Tb/sec. Astro Terra, in collaboration with
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Pasadena, CA) has built a
32-channel 1-Gigabit per second earth-to-satellite link
with a 2000 km range.
In Japan, NEC Corporation has
developed a method for interconnecting circuit boards
optically using Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Laser
arrays (VCSEL). Researchers at Osaka City University
reported a method for automatic alignment of a set of
optical beams in space with a set of optical fibers.
Researchers at NTT in Tokyo have designed an optical
back plane with free-space optical interconnects using
tunable beam deflectors and a mirror. Their project
achieved 1000 interconnections per printed-circuit
board, with throughput ranging from 1 to 10
Terabits/sec.
Companies, universities and government
labs are reporting more all-optical and organic
technology developments almost weekly. Stay tuned for
more hot future news in this bright new realm of
science!
Logic gates are the building blocks of
any digital system," he continues. "An optical
logic gate is a switch that controls one light beam with
another. It is "on" when the device transmits
light, and "off" when it blocks the
light."
"Our phthalocyanine switch
operates in the nanosecond regime (i.e., Gigabits per
second), functioning as an all-optical AND logic gate.
To demonstrate it, we waveguided a continuous (cw) laser
beam co-linearly with a nanosecond pump beam through a
thin film of metal-free phthalocyanine. The output was
sent to a fast photo-detector and to an oscilloscope.
The cw beam was found to pulsate synchronously with the
pump beam, showing the characteristic table of an AND
logic gate."
Right:
A schematic of the nanosecond all-optical AND logic gate
setup. More schematics and illustrations are available
in "Recent
Advances in Photonic Devices for Optical Computing"
by NASA/Marshall's Hossin Abdeldayem, Donald O. Frazier,
Mark S. Paley, and William K. Witherow.
"Our setup for the picosecond
switch was similar, except that the phthalocyanine film
was replaced with a hollow fiber coated from inside with
a thin polydiacetylene film. Both collinear laser beams
were focused on one end of the tube, and a lens at the
other end focused the output onto a monochrometer with a
fast detector attached. The product of the two beams
demonstrates three of the four characteristics of a NAND
logic gate."
"Optical bistable devices and
logic gates such as these are the equivalent of
electronic transistors," concludes Dr. Abdeldayem.
"They operate as very high speed on-off switches
and are also useful as optical cells for information
storage."
According to Dr. Frazier, these
all-optical computer components and thin-films developed
by NASA are essential to the current worldwide work in
electro-optical hybrid computers - and will help to make
possible the astounding organic optical computers that
will be the standard of future terrestrial and space
information, operating and communication systems.
Related Links:
"Recent
Advances in Photonic Devices for Optical Computing"
by NASA/Marshall's Hossin Abdeldayem, Donald O.
Frazier, Mark S. Paley, and William K. Witherow. 700kb
in Microsoft Word format.
Pushing
the Limits of Computer Technology -- Science@NASA
headline story from May 1999.
Microgravity
News - Winter 1995 report about the Alliance for
Nonlinear Optics.
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