The U.S.
Department of Defense has selected the Institute for Lasers, Photonics
and Biopho-tonics at UB to lead a world-class consortium in a five-year,
$5 million effort to develop new materials in molecular electronics, photonics
and opto-electronics to form the basis of a new generation of solar-powered,
information-technology systems.
Such systems
are expected to one day supplant electronics systems, which are fast approaching
their physical limits in terms of data-storage capacity and transmission
speeds.
The grant
was the only award for developing molecular electronic and nanophotonic
materials that the Department of Defense made in the current round of
funding under the departmentÕs Defense University Research Initiative
in Nanotechnology (DURINT) program.
It provides
$2.2 million to the Institute for Lasers, Photonics and Biophotonics to
support a multi-institutional Center for Advanced Information Technology,
directed by Paras Prasad, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Department
of Chemistry in the College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) and executive director
of the institute. Other UB co-investigators are Bruce McCombe, professor
of physics and CAS senior associate dean; Hong Luo, assistant professor
of physics; Alexander Cartwright, associate professor of electrical engineering
and a deputy director of the institute, and Hiroaki Suga, assistant professor
of chemistry.
The consortium
features multi-disciplinary teams of researchers who are pioneers in their
fields at UB, the University of California at Berkeley, MIT, Yale and
the University of Washington.
Responding
to the grant announcement, President William R. Greiner said this latest
in a long line of substantial grants to the institute Òsignals both its
success as a true pioneer in the field of nanophotonics, and its compelling
ability to attract brilliant researchers from across scientific disciplines.Ó
ÒOur Institute
for Lasers, Photonics and Biophotonics continues to command the attention
of the international research and technology communitiesÑand thatÕs great
news for UB and for Western New York,Ó Greiner added.
Provost Elizabeth
D. Capaldi praised Prasad and his co-investigators, noting that they Òare
at the cutting edge of research and their interdisciplinary approach has
made them leaders in the country today. UBÕs strength is the ability to
bring together researchers from many different areas, and the institute
demonstrates the great benefits of this approach.Ó
The ability
to take such a comprehensive, cross-disciplinary approach has allowed
UB researchers to assume a leading position in the fiercely competitive
fields of nanophotonics and molecular electronics.
ÒThe multidisciplinary
environment that we have created at the institute has been a major driving
force in obtaining this support,Ó said Prasad. ÒCredit goes to the real,
not virtual, interaction that occurs among all of us at UB and with our
research partners at other institutions.
ÒIn particular,
by bringing engineers into our lab to work alongside physicists and chemists,
we are going to be able to bring these emerging technologies to a new
level, closer to the marketplaceÓ said Prasad.
Cartwright
added: ÒWhat this gives us is the ability to see these new technologies
all the way through from basic materials to applications.Ó
The researchers
will focus on the full range of issues involved in developing new IT materials
on the molecular and nanometer scale, including theoretical modeling and
chemical synthesis, characterization, device fabrication, and testing
and integration of components into larger-scale systems.
Characterized
as not just the next generation of IT materials, but the one after that,
the nanomaterials expected to result from this grant will be based on
new solar-powered or photonic materials and structures that can increase
dramatically the speed at which data are transmitted to thousands of times
faster than current desktop systems.
The new materials
are expected to facilitate far better methods of encryption, terabit data
storage and high bandwidth processing necessitated by the huge increases
being seen in traffic on the Internet.
Last year,
in one of the first papers on the subject, Prasad and his colleagues authored
an invited article for the Journal of Physical Chemistry that outlined
UBÕs groundbreaking research on nanophotonics, the emerging field that
deals with optical processes at the nanoscale.
Photonics
is the information-processing counterpart of electronics, using photons
instead of electrons to process information. In harnessing the power of
light, scientists expect to be able eventually to transmit data up to
thousands of times faster and store it up to thousands of times more efficiently
than now is possible.
Currently,
Prasad explained, solar cells can only harvest photons in the green region
of the optical spectrum. He and his colleagues are working on developing
nanomaterials that harvest photons over the full optical spectrum, enabling
these materials to operate at maximum efficiencies.
ÒIn the next
generation of IT technologies, we will start to see materials that still
are based on silicon, but which will measure in the nanoscale range,Ó
explained E.J. Bergey, research associate professor of chemistry and a
deputy director of the Institute for Lasers, Photonics and Biophotonics.
ÒThe generation after that, the one this grant has targeted, will include
devices where organic-based materials are utilized in place of inorganic,
such as the use of self-ordered assembly used in biological processes
to produce nanometer-scale materials.Ó
That means,
for example, that some of the same materials that nature uses to make
up the intricate machinery inside living systems one day may be sitting
inside your hard drive, too.
Suga, who,
among other things, is investigating the origins of the genetic code,
will for the purposes of this grant team up with colleagues to see how
the efficient organization of chemical systems, such as DNA, might be
utilized in information processing.
A prime focus
is chemical self-assemblyÑnatureÕs tendency to want to create regular
patterns where it can. If that power can be harnessed for the generation
of new nanomaterials to form photonic crystals, for example, the researchers
believe it will provide unprecedented cost savings.
In particular,
Suga is looking at self-assembling DNA molecules to see how they might
use DNA-templated assembly to organize photonic and electronic nanostructures.
One goal is to use the DNA templates to produce nanowires and nanoarrays,
which, attached to a substrate, would make up the integrated circuit component
of a potential large-capacityÑbut small in sizeÑdata-storage device.
UB scientists,
together with collaborators at MIT, also will be looking into the use
of virus particlesÑbiological viruses, not the computer varietyÑas a kind
of flexible container for photonic materials that can perform various
IT functions. One idea being explored at UB is to remove the genomic material
inside a virus particle and replace it with photonic and electronic materials
capable of storing and transmitting data.
The goal
is to use these particles to develop building blocks for novel photonic
materials that would be used as miniaturized sensors that would function
in the computer chips of the future.
Developing
smaller, faster and more densely packed IT devices requires a host of
different approaches, which is why UBÕs multidisciplinary team will, in
turn, be collaborating with multidisciplinary teams at the other institutions.
Areas of expertise at the other institutions range from development of
molecular transistors to random-access memory devices and photon harvesting
techniques.
ÒThe bottom
line is that we need to come up with electronic devices that run more
efficiently, on a smaller scale and that waste less energy,Ó said Luo.