Plasmonics -- a possible replacement for current computing approaches -- may
pave the way for the next generation of computers that operate faster and store
more information than electronically-based systems and are smaller than optically-based
systems, according to a Penn
State engineer who has developed a plasmonic switch.
"If plasmonics are realized, the future will have circuits as small as
the current electronic ones with a capacity a million times better," said
Tony Jun Huang, James Henderson assistant professor of Engineering Science and
Mechanics. "Plasmonics combines the speed and capacity of photonic -- light
based -- circuits with the small size of electronic circuits."
Currently, electronic circuits can be made very small, but they are limited
by their capacity and the speed that information can travel in the circuits.
Optical circuits send information at the speed of light, but the size is large,
limited by the light's wavelength. Plasmonics combines the best of electronic
and optical circuits and can transmit electrons and light at the same time using
the surface of the device.
Huang's team created a plasmonic switch from switchable bistable rotaxanes.
Rotaxanes are complex molecules that consist of a dumbbell shape with a ring
or rings encircling the shaft and are sometimes called molecular machines. The
ring can either move from one end of the barbell to the other or rotate around
the shaft. Changes in molecular shape are the basis of the plasmonic switch.
Computers, in their simplest form, are machines that can say yes or no multiple
times to transfer information. The motion of a molecule can serve the same purpose
as the on off switch on a light.
The researchers attached their molecular machines to gold-coated nanodiscs
fabricated on glass. The machines were attached with disulfide functional groups.
The dumbbell shaped molecules have two areas of the shaft primed with two different
chemicals. The ring is initially drawn to circle at one primed area. When the
chemical there is oxidized, the ring is repelled and moves to the other primed
area, flipping the switch. The process is reversible, so the ring returns to
its original state to switch on again later. When the molecule moves, it changes
the surface plasmon resonance in that tiny area of the metal where it is attached.
This change in resonance is what would send the signal on the circuit. The plasmonic
switch that Huang and his team developed is not yet part of a circuit.
"Plasmonic circuits have not yet been achieved," said Huang. "In
the past, the plasmonic devices made were all passive." These devices were
used as light sources, lenses and waveguides
Huang's switches are activated by a chemical process, however, this is not
the optimal choice for a working circuit.
"We believe that the chemically-driven redox process can be replaced with
direct electrical or optical stimulation, a logical development that would establish
a technological basis for the production of a new class of molecular-machine-based
active plasmonic components for solid-state nanophotonic integrated circuits
with the potential for low-energy and ultra small operations," the researchers
state in a recent issue of Nano Letters.
In essence, plasmonic devices would allow computers to get faster and have
more memory storage in smaller spaces. Storage of as much as 1,000 movies on
a typical USB drive would be possible. Huang suggests that applications like
YouTube, which are very popular but have terrible resolution, could become places
to see high-resolution images.
"We are in the very beginning of this field," said Huang. "Creation
of a plasmonic circuit is probably five years away."
Besides Huang, researchers on this project include Yue Bing Zheng and Bala
Krishna Juluri, graduate students in Engineering Science and Mechanics; Lasse
Jensen, professor of chemistry; Paul Weiss, distinguished professor of chemistry
and physics, all at Penn State; Lei Fang, graduate student and J. Fraser Stoddart,
professor, Northwestern University; Ying-Wei yang, postdoctoral fellow, University
of California, Los Angeles and Amar H. Flood, professor, Indiana University.
The U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Science Foundation
supported this work.
Posted February 11th, 2009