Researchers from the Molecular Foundry, a user facility at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Columbia University, and Universidad Autónoma de Madrid in Spain have developed a new optical computing material from photon-avalanching nanoparticles. This approach offers a path toward realizing smaller, faster components for next-generation computers by taking advantage of intrinsic optical bistability – a property that allows a material to use light to switch between two different states, such as glowing brightly or not at all. For decades, researchers have sought ways to make a computer that uses light instead of electricity. But in previous studies, optical bistability had almost exclusively been observed in bulk materials that were too big for a microchip and challenging to mass produce. Now, the researchers suggest that the new photon-avalanching nanoparticles could overcome these challenges in realizing optical bistability at the nanoscale.
An official website of the United States government.