Optical Computing Technology

August 20th, 2009 by admin | Posted under Electronics Seminar Topics.

This  Electronics Engineering Seminar Topic deals with the following:

With the growth of computing technology the need of high performance computers (HPC) has significantly increased. Optics has been used in computing for a number of years but the main emphasis has been and continues to be to link portions of computers, for communications, or more intrinsically in devices that have some optical application or component (optical pattern recognition etc.)

Optical computing was a hot research area in 1980’s.But the work tapered off due to materials limitations that prevented optochips from getting small enough and cheap enough beyond laboratory curiosities. Now, optical computers are back with advances in self-assembled conducting organic polymers that promise super-tiny of all optical chips.

Optical computing technology is, in general, developing in two directions. One approach is to build computers that have the same architecture as present day computers but using optics that is Electro optical hybrids. Another approach is to generate a completely new kind of computer, which can perform all functional operations in optical mode. In recent years, a number of devices that can ultimately lead us to real optical computers have already been manufactured. These include optical logic gates, optical switches, optical interconnections and optical memory.

Current trends in optical computing emphasize communications, for example the use of free space optical interconnects as a potential solution to remove ‘Bottlenecks’ experienced in electronic architectures. Optical technology is one of the most promising, and may eventually lead to new computing applications as a consequence of faster processing speed, as well as better connectivity and higher bandwidth.

NEED FOR OPTICAL COMPUTING
The pressing need for optical technology stems from the fact that today’s computers are limited by the time response of electronic circuits. A solid transmission medium limits both the speed and volume of signals, as well as building up heat that damages components.

One of the theoretical limits on how fast a computer can function is given by Einstein’s principle that signal cannot propagate faster than speed of light. So to make computers faster, their components must be smaller and there by decrease the distance between them. This has resulted in the development of very large scale integration (VLSI) technology, with smaller device dimensions and greater complexity. The smallest dimensions of VLSI nowadays are about 0.08mm. Despite the incredible progress in the development and refinement of the basic technologies over the past decade, there is growing concern that these technologies may not be capable of solving the computing problems of even the current millennium. The speed of computers was achieved by miniaturizing electronic components to a very small micron-size scale, but they are limited not only by the speed of electrons in matter but also by the increasing density of interconnections necessary to link the electronic gates on microchips.

The optical computer comes as a solution of miniaturization problem.Optical data processing can perform several operations in parallel much faster and easier than electrons. This parallelism helps in staggering computational power. For example a calculation that takes a conventional electronic computer more than 11 years to complete could be performed by an optical computer in a single hour. Any way we can realize that in an optical computer, electrons are replaced by photons, the subatomic bits of electromagnetic radiation that make up light.

SOME KEY OPTICAL COMPONENTS FOR COMPUTING
The major breakthroughs on optical computing have been centered on the development of micro-optic devices for data input.

1. VCSEL (VERTICAL CAVITY SURFACE EMITTING LASER)
VCSEL (pronounced ‘vixel’) is a semiconductor vertical cavity surface emitting laser diode that emits light in a cylindrical beam vertically from the surface of a fabricated wafer, and offers significant advantages when compared to the edge-emitting lasers currently used in the majority of fiber optic communications devices. The principle involved in the operation of a VCSEL is very similar to those of regular lasers.

There are two special semiconductor materials sandwiching an active layer where all the action takes place. But rather than reflective ends, in a VCSEL there are several layers of partially reflective mirrors above and below the active layer. Layers of semiconductors with differing compositions create these mirrors, and each mirror reflects a narrow range of wavelengths back in to the cavity in order to cause light emission at just one wavelength.

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Comments

17 Responses to “Optical Computing Technology”
  1. chioma.ekpe says:

    a seminer topic on optical computing

  2. shy says:

    sir pls send me the full seminar topics .pls…………………………….

  3. korahson says:

    Respected sir,
    i am greatful to you if u send the full seminar topic about ATM WITH AN EYE

  4. vipin says:

    a seminer topic on optical computing

  5. sujith ps says:

    plz send me more information about this topic

  6. manish says:

    please send and published some related topics, thais is very usefull for our studys

  7. devi says:

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  8. devi says:

    I WANT MORE NEW SEMINAR TOPICS ABOUT COMMUNICATION

  9. naveen says:

    please send latest seminar topics

  10. mohit says:

    :wink: plz send the full detail…….

  11. mohit says:

    plz send me full detail………… :eek:

  12. praveen says:

    sir please send me seminar on optical switching

  13. arun says:

    I want the latest topics of electronics….

  14. jitesh says:

    sir, pls send me ppt for IVRS semi
    nar

  15. Sachin says:

    plz send me the ppt about this topic

  16. piya says:

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  17. krishna says:

    plz send me full details on dis topic…………………………..

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