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Life Expectancy on the Rise - Even for Quantum States For the first time, scientists have succeeded in measuring and controlling the lifetime of quantum states with potential use in optoelectronic chips. This achievement is highly significant for the ongoing development of this cutting-edge technology. The breakthrough involved measuring the intersubband relaxation time of charge states in silicon-germanium SiGe structures on a picosecond scale. Experiments have also shown that it is possible to control and extend these times. As a result, this body of work - currently published in Physical Review Letters and supported by the Austrian Science Fund FWF - represents a major advance in the development of data processing based on optoelectronic chips. Transmitting information via light quanta (photons) is nothing new. That is precisely what every fibre optic cable does with exceptional efficiency. But the process that is both ultra fast and reliable over long distances fails when used in close quarters. At present, photon-based chip-to-chip communication is not possible in data processing. The problem is the photon sources. Due to its semiconductor structure, the raw material currently used to manufacture computer chips - silicon - does not allow the generation of photons by conventional means. However, unconventional means may provide a solution - and that is precisely what the group from the Institute of Semiconductor and Solid State Physics at the University of Linz is working on. Laser on a Chip DI Rauter and his colleagues have now succeeded in accurately measuring this timeframe. They were supported in their work by the Foundation for Fundamental Research Matter - FOM, based in Rijnhuizen, Netherlands - and its free-electron laser FELIX. The laser beam of this device can be pulsed in picoseconds, which means it can be used to measure extremely fast processes. Fractions of a Fraction of a Second Published in Physical Review Letters, the work also forms part of the FWF special research program IR-ON (InfraRed Optical Nanostructures). A total of ten working groups from Austria and Germany contribute to this program, which focuses amongst other semiconductors on SiGe compounds with nanostructures that should be conducive for use in optoelectronic chips. The work conducted by DI Rauter and his colleagues has enabled the program to move a quantum leap - or one small step - closer to this goal. Original publication: Continuous Voltage Tunability of Intersubband Relaxation Times in Coupled Well Structures. P. Rauter, T. Fromherz, N. Q. Vinh, B. N. Murdin, G. Mussler, D. Grützmacher & G. Bauer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 147401 (2009) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.147401 Scientific contact Austrian Science Fund FWF Copy Editing & Distribution Vienna, 14th April 2009
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Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Haus der Forschung, Sensengasse 1, 1090 Vienna T +43-1-505 67 40 F +43-1-505 67 39 office@fwf.ac.at - www.fwf.ac.at |
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