Researchers reveal that advanced nanolaser designs enable ultra-low power operation and compact integration for next-generation optical systems
PISCATAWAY, N.J., June 25, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — A new wave of innovation is transforming the future of optical technologies, driven by rapid advancements in semiconductor nanolasers. These advances are essential for future applications such as on-chip optical communication and neuromorphic computing, which require compact, energy-efficient light sources.
In a recently published paper, researchers detail the latest developments in this field, focusing on cutting-edge laser designs that enable ultra-low energy operation and deep subwavelength light confinement — crucial for future technologies like on-chip optical communication and neuromorphic computing. The study was led by Prof. Jesper Mørk from Technical University of Denmark and was published in IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics on 21 October, 2024. It highlights how miniaturizing laser cavities to the nanoscale not only improves energy efficiency but also challenges classical laser physics models.
Semiconductor lasers, first demonstrated in 1962, have long been fundamental to technologies ranging from telecommunications to imaging and sensing. However, as global demands shift toward more compact, faster, and energy-efficient systems, the traditional macroscopic design principles of lasers are being challenged at the nanoscale.
The paper spotlights three key innovations in nanolaser technology:
Photonic crystal nanolasers – These use periodic structures to trap light in extremely small cavities, achieving room-temperature operation with record-low threshold currents as low as 730 nA. Deep subwavelength cavities – Recent designs have shattered traditional optical confinement limits, enabling laser cavities smaller than the diffraction limit — once thought impossible without high-loss metallic components.Semiconductor Fano lasers – Leveraging interference effects known as Fano resonances, these lasers can generate ultrashort optical pulses and exhibit improved spectral properties, offering new functionality for high-speed optical systems.”Miniaturizing laser cavities to the nanoscale not only enables unprecedented energy efficiency but also challenges our understanding of fundamental laser physics,” state the paper’s authors.
With semiconductor nanolasers continuing to evolve, their role in powering the next generation of information technology is no longer a futuristic vision — it is becoming a present-day reality.
Reference
Title of original paper: Nanostructured Semiconductor Lasers
Journal: IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics
DOI: 10.1109/JSTQE.2024.3483900
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SOURCE IEEE Photonics Society