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Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium on the Optoelectronics College held in November 2007 at the Ballathie House Hotel . Professor Wilson Sibbett, University of St Andrews
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Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Optoelectronics: the opportunity- optoelectronics has come of age!

This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium on the Optoelectronics College held in November 2007 at the Ballathie House Hotel .

Professor Wilson Sibbett, University of St Andrews

Page 2: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Introductory remarks

• Electronic devices are all around us but what about devices that exploit

‘optoelectronics’?

• Everyday optoelectronic technologies range from flat-screen displays (TVs,

computers, mobile phones …) through the checkout bar-scanners to internet

communications links

• A growing number of healthcare-related implementations of optoelectronics are

beginning to emerge in biology and medicine

• In Scotland, we have notable research strengths in optoelectronics and efforts are

being made to translate these into more widespread and practical applications

Page 3: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Basis of this overview

• Let us start with an historical perspective on optoelectronics

• Then, consider semiconductor devices as the bridge between

electronics and optoelectronics

• Starting with LEDs we proceed to lasers

• We can consider the translation of science to technology

• We can look at a few representative applications of optoelectronics

• All of this has implications for the teaching of optoelectronics

Page 4: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

2007 marks a century of optoelectronics

• HENRY J. ROUND was a key figure in the histroy of optoelectronics. He was:

• ‘One of Marconi’s Assistants in England’ and later the Chief of Marconi

Research – he published a 24-line note in ‘Electrical World’ reporting a “bright

glow” from a carborundum diode.

• [Round, H. J., Electrical World, 49, 308 (1907)]

• Was Henry Round the discoverer of the LED? Maybe not: but most definitely he

can be credited with the discovery of electroluminescence!

• In any case, 1907 can be pinpointed as the year of birth for optical electronics

or optoelectronics!

Page 5: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Oleg Vladimirovich LOSEV – the short life of a genius

• We must acknowledge the early work of pioneer, Dr Oleg Losev (1903-1942)

• He was the son of a Russian Imperial Army Officer but the politics of the day denied him any career path in Bolshevik Russia!

• Sadly, he died of hunger at the age of 39 during the blockade of Leningrad!

Page 6: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Oleg Losev – the discoverer of the LED?• He was remarkable as self-educated scientist. His PhD degree was awarded in 1938 by the

Ioffe Institute (Leningrad) without a formal thesis because he had published 43 journal papers

and 16 patents.

• Working in a besieged Leningrad (1941), he discovered that a 3-terminal semiconductor

device could be constructed to have characteristics similar to those of a triode valve but

circumstances prevented publication! Losev had probably invented the TRANSISTOR!

• Mid-1920s: Oleg Losev observed light emission from electrically-biased zinc oxide and silicon

carbide crystal rectifier diodes – Light Emitting Diodes or LEDs!

• Called the “inverse photo-electric effect”, Losev worked out the theory of LED operation and

studied the emission spectra and even observed spectral narrowing at high drive currents –

evidence perhaps of the stimulated emission that applies to lasers?!

• Notably, the first significant blue LED re-invented in the 1990s used silicon carbide!!

Page 7: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Semiconductor LEDs and lasers

• LEDs are now commonplace in games consoles, remote controls, vehicle lights,

traffic lights and, increasingly, in domestic lighting

• By the end of this decade, the market value is predicted to reach $15B!

• Semiconductor lasers: the LED process is at the core of this effect and laser action

was first reported in 1962 by four US research groups (2 at GE, IBM, MIT)

• The are many everyday applications of semiconductor lasers in barcode readers,

CD & DVD players, optical-carrier sources for communications and internet data

• NB: The optical frequency for the optimum telecommunications wavelength

(~1500nm) is extremely high - equivalent to ~200 THz (i.e. 200,000,000,000,000Hz)!

Page 8: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Major areas of commercial growth in the optoelectronics marketplace

• Flat-panel displays: recorded sales are up 30% year on year: currently,

8% growth in Europe & USA and 9% in Japan

• Solid-state vehicle lighting: much more than just brake lights!

• Solid-state domestic lighting: replacement of incandescent lighting with

LED-based sources would reduce CO2 emissions by many millions of

tonnes worldwide!

• Power generation: solar cell technologies are progressing steadily – for

example, in Germany a new power station based on solar cells is

producing 5MW to power up 1800 households

Page 9: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Recent advances in LEDs for domestic lighting

By way of background:

• Incandescent lights are not efficient and have a so-called luminous

efficacy of 13-14 lumens/Watt (L/W)

• Halogen lighting is a little more efficient at 17L/W

• Fluorescent lights are significantly better with typical luminous efficacies

of 60-70L/W

More recently:

• White LEDs have achieved 100L/W and, in the laboratory, figures up to

300L/W have been reported for tailored ‘warm-white’ LED lighting!

Page 10: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Organic semiconductors

• We can now have organic

materials that have exploitable

semiconducting characteristics.

These feature:

• Conjugated molecules

• Novel types of semiconductors

• Easy processing schemes

• LED compatibility

• Physical flexibility

Page 11: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs)

These diagrams illustrate the basic OLED concepts.

Page 12: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Examples of some OLED displays

Sony ultra-thin 13” displayKodak viewfinder

Epson widescreen display

Page 13: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Photo-dynamic therapy (PDT)

The ‘sensitised’ tumour region is then exposed to intense light from a source such as a laser or LED

Exposure to light induces the PP9 to produce singlet molecular oxygen that leads to local cell kill within the tumour

ALA* cream is applied to the site of the skin tumour (*5-aminolevulinic acid)

The ALA is metabolised to light-sensitive PP9 predominantly within the tumour

Page 14: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Before After

A typical scar-free outcome from photo-dynamic therapy or ‘PDT’ of a skin cancer

Page 15: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Potential of OLEDs for PDT

OLEDs have the advantages of:• Uniform illumination• Light weight – so can be worn• Relatively low intensity for longer treatment

– So reduced pain, increased effectiveness• Low cost - disposable

– Attractive for hygiene– Widens access to PDT

• A simple wearable power supply• Ambulatory treatment1

– At work– At home

1. See for example, Moseley et al, Brit.Jour.Derm., 154, 747 (2006)

Page 16: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Typical device application cycle

Device applied

Device worn during normal daily activities

Disposal

Page 17: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Skin cancer treated with OLED-based PDT

Effective treatment with reduced scarring and pain

Page 18: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Concept of spontaneous emission

Level 1

Energy = E1

Level 2

Energy = E2

• Consider an ‘excited’ atom

• This excited atom will relax over some characteristic relaxation time

• If photons are produced during the relaxation process this is called spontaneous emission

• This emission process is independent of external influences

Page 19: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Concept of stimulated emission

• An excited atom can be stimulated to emit a photon

• This process is called stimulated emission

• The stimulated photon is an exact copy of the photon that induced the transition

• A repeat of this process leads to the optical gain which represents the basis of laser action

Excited Atom

Incident Photon

Stimulated Transition Incident Photon

EmittedPhoton

Page 20: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

• Stimulated emission provides optical gain

• Photons reflected by the resonator mirrors cause an avalanche of stimulated emission along the axis of the resonator

• A high intensity beam of light thus builds up in the laser resonator

• A collimated and directional laser beam emerges from a partially transmitting exit mirror

A laser or ‘laser oscillator’

Page 21: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

A semiconductor diode laser chip

200nm active GaAs layer

3m p-type GaAlAs

n-type GaAlAs

~200m

• Cleaved or cleaved-and-coated facets act as the mirrors in a diode laser

• This is the preferred source for optical communications

Page 22: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Absorption of light by major tissue chromophores

Page 23: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Illumination of a hand and wrist area with light in 700nm, 800nm, 900nm spectral regions illustrates clearly the deeper penetration at the longer wavelengths into the biological tissue

Page 24: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Treatment of varicose veins

• The laser used produces green pulses of light for strong absorption in blood but having durations matched to the tissue thermal relaxation time.

Before After

Page 25: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Skin resurfacing using lasers• Laser skin resurfacing is becoming the method of choice

– preferable to chemical peels or dermabrasion

• A pulsed carbon dioxide laser is used

Before After!

Page 26: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

We can now consider “digital optoelectronics”

• Lasers can be made to produce either:

- constant intensity beams, or

- sequences of discrete optical pulses or “optical digits”

Pulsed

Continuous

Time

Inte

nsi

ty

Page 27: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Why might we wish to use optical digits?

• The laser pulses or ‘optical digits’ can have very high peak intensity

• Thus, these light ‘impulses” can induce either single- photon or rather more

interesting multiple-photon interactions

• The advantage is strong near-infrared absorption (in tissue) with interactions

involving two or three photons that are equivalent to green or blue/uv light

• The average power or heating effect can be at a modest level to avoid tissue

damage

• Ultrashort pulses [picoseconds (10-12s) and femtoseconds (10-15s)] also imply short

exposure times and so we have ultrafast (or snapshot) photography

Page 28: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

An example of a multiple-photon excitation

• This multi-photon excitation is localised both in space and in time - interactions occur primarily at the beam focus for the ultrashort light pulses

- penetration of long-wavelength light but interaction may involve 2,3 photons!

Page 29: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Multi-photon excitation for treatment of cancer tumours (PDT)

Photogen Inc, Knoxville Tennessee & Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirmary

For example: Melanoma on skin in mice

The laser pulses are in the near-infrared (1047nm) but 3-photon absorption is exploited for the photo-dynamic therapy (PDT)

Prior to treatment Immediately followingtreatment

2 months aftertreatment

Page 30: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Snapshots in the millisecond regime[Eadweard Muybridge –Galloping Horse, 1887]

Page 31: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Flash photography with microsecond exposures

• The motion can be effectivelt ‘frozen’ using short pulses of light- e.g., using 1 microsecond flashes from a xenon flashbulb

Page 32: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

An example of ‘frozen motion’! [Harold Edgerton, MIT, 1964]

Page 33: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Concept of prompt imaging

• An ultrashort laser pulse passing through a scattering medium carries image information via three components as illustrated

Input

diffuse

snake-like ballisticsnake-like

ballistic

diffuse Output

Page 34: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Seeing through raw chicken!

Photograph of two crossed metal needles

(0.5mm diameter)

The needles viewed through a 6mm slab of raw chicken breast in ordinary

illumination

‘Snapshot’ image of the needles using

femtosecond illuminating and gating pulses

Page 35: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Laser beam propagation in optical fibres – many-km-lengths of glass!

• Intensity– either continuous or pulsed

• Focusability– efficient coupling & propagation of laser beams in optical fibres

Many applications in endoscopy and tele/data-communications

Optical fibre

Page 36: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Optical fibres

Page 37: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Optoelectronic communications

Page 38: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Optoelectronic datacomms at 100Tb/s!

What data speed does this represent?

100 Tbits ~1.5x1012 words ~1.7 million x works of Shakespeare -

in one second!

Page 39: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

High-speed data transfer - DVDs

Other information media?

100 Tbits > 600 DVD movies!!

in one second

Page 40: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Laserpulses

White light

Sample

Dichroicmirror

CCDcamera

Shutter

An application in biology involves the poration of cells to provide access to ‘low penetration’ drugs

Page 41: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Corrective eye surgery using laser pulses

Schematic of a laser-pulse produced flap:– laser pulses focused 160µm below the tissue surface to

produce micro-cavitations

– subsequent micro-machined cut to provide hinged flap

Page 42: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Femtosecond laser-based eye surgery

Femtosecond-laser-based Keratomileusis procedure

– Laser pulses are focused and scanned to outline with micron precision a lens-shaped block of corneal stroma or lenticule

– This lenticule is then removed and the corneal flap replaced

Page 43: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Optoelectronics for peace – weapons decommissioning!

• Femtosecond laser pulses cut pellets of high-explosive and metals

F Roeske Jr et al

Cut in HNS (LX-15) withfemtosecond laser pulses

Cut in PETN (LX-16) with 500ps laser pulses

KEY ADVANTAGES- this process offers a high safety status- there are no solid HE waste products- this offers decommissioning opportunities!

Page 44: Optoelectronics: the opportunity - optoelectronics has come of age! This perspective is reproduced from a presentation given at an inauguration mini-symposium.

Concluding remarks

• Optoelectronic devices have come of age and have opened up a wide range of

exciting possibilities both within science and in the products used in everyday

life

• These are re-defining many of the boundaries of modern life and technology

• Some knowledge of optoelectronics is vital for all of us living in the 21st

century

• It follows, therefore, that the teaching of some practical skills in

optoelectronics should now form an ‘exciting’ part of a modern

science curriculum and education!