MIT
researchers have developed a bright, efficient silicon led, pictured, that can
be integrated directly onto computer chips. The advance could reduce cost and
improve performance of microelectronics that use LEDs for sensing or
communication. Credit: courtesy of the researchers.
The advance
could cut production costs and reduce the size of microelectronics for sensing
and communication.
Light-emitting
diodes — LEDs — can do way more than illuminate your living room. These light
sources are useful microelectronics too.
Smartphones,
for example, can use an LED proximity sensor to determine if you’re holding the
phone next to your face (in which case the screen turns off). The LED sends a
pulse of light toward your face, and a timer in the phone measures how long it
takes that light to reflect back to the phone, a proxy for how close the phone
is to your face. LEDs are also handy for distance measurement in autofocus
cameras and gesture recognition.
One
problem with LEDs: It’s tough to make them from silicon. That means LED sensors
must be manufactured separately from their device’s silicon-based processing
chip, often at a hefty price. But that could one day change, thanks to new
research from MIT’s Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE).
Researchers
have fabricated a silicon chip with fully integrated LEDs, bright enough to
enable state-of-the-art sensor and communication technologies. The advance
could lead to not only streamlined manufacturing, but also better performance
for nanoscale electronics.
Jin Xue, a
PhD student in RLE, led the research, which was presented at the IEDM
conference this month. MIT co-authors included Professor Rajeev Ram, who leads
the Physical Optics and Electronics Group in RLE, as well as Jaehwan Kim,
Alexandra Mestre, Dodd Gray, Danielus Kramnik, and Amir Atabaki. Other
co-authors included Kian Ming Tan, Daniel Chong, Sandipta Roy, H. Nong, Khee
Yong Lim, and Elgin Quek, from the company GLOBALFOUNDRIES.
Silicon is widely used in computer chips because it’s abundant, cheap, and a semiconductor, meaning it can alternately block and allow the flow of electrons. This capacity to switch between “off” and “on” underlies a computer’s ability to perform calculations. But despite silicon’s excellent electronic properties, it doesn’t quite shine when it comes to optical properties — silicon makes for a poor light source. So electrical engineers often turn away from the material when they need to connect LED technologies to a device’s computer chip.
These
two images show the silicon led switched on (left) and off. Credit: courtesy of
the researchers.
The LED in
your smartphone’s proximity sensor, for example, is made from III-V
semiconductors, so called because they contain elements from the third and
fifth columns of the periodic table. (Silicon is in the fourth column.) These
semiconductors are more optically efficient than silicon — they produce more
light from a given amount of energy. (You don’t see the light produced from the
proximity sensor because it is infrared, not visible.)
And while
the proximity sensor is a fraction of the size of the phone’s silicon
processor, it adds significantly to the phone’s overall cost. “There’s an
entirely different fabrication process that’s needed, and it’s a separate
factory that manufactures that one part,” says Ram. “So the goal would be: Can
you put all this together in one system?” Ram’s team did just that.
Xue
designed a silicon-based LED with specially engineered junctions — the contacts
between different zones of the diode — to enhance brightness. This boosted
efficiency: The LED operates at low voltage, but it still produces enough light
to transmit a signal through 5 meters of fiber optic cable. Plus,
GLOBALFOUNDRIES manufactured the LEDs right alongside other silicon
microelectronic components, including transistors and photon detectors. While
Xue’s LED didn’t quite outshine a traditional III-V semiconductor LED, it
easily beat out prior attempts at silicon-based LEDs.
“Our
optimization process of how to make a better silicon LED had quite an
improvement over past reports,” says Xue. He adds that the silicon LED could
also switch on and off faster than expected. The team used the LED to send
signals at frequencies up to 250 megahertz, indicating that the technology
could potentially be used not only for sensing applications, but also for
efficient data transmission. Xue’s team plans to continue developing the
technology. But, he says, “it’s already great progress.”
Ram
envisions a day when LED technology can be built right onto a device’s silicon
processor — no separate factory needed. “This is designed in a standard
microelectronics process,” he says. “It’s a really integrated solution.”
In
addition to cheaper manufacturing, the advance could also improve LED
performance and efficiency as electronics shrink to ever smaller scales. That’s
because, at a microscopic scale, III-V semiconductors have nonideal surfaces,
riddled with “dangling bonds” that allow energy to be lost as heat rather than
as light, according to Ram. In contrast, silicon forms a cleaner crystal
surface. “We can take advantage of those very clean surfaces,” says Ram. “It’s
useful enough to be competitive for these microscale applications.”
“This is
an important development,” says Ming Wu, an electrical engineer at the
University of California at Berkeley, who was not involved with the research.
“It allows silicon integrated circuits to communicate with one another directly
with light instead of electric wires. This is somewhat surprising as silicon
has an indirect bandgap and does not normally emit light.”
Silicon
“occupies the crown in electronic devices” will continue its reign “without a
doubt,” says Chang-Won Lee, an applied optics researcher at Hanbat National
University, who also was not involved in the work. However, he agrees with Wu
that this advance represents a step toward silicon-based computers that are
less reliant on electronic communication. “For example, there is an optical CPU
architecture that the semiconductor industry has been dreaming of. The report
of silicon-based micro-LEDs shows significant progress in these attempts.”
Ram is
confident that his team can continue finetuning the technology, so that one day
LEDs will be cheaply and efficiently integrated into silicon chips as the
industry standard. “We don’t think we’re anywhere close to the end of the line
here,” says Ram. “We have ideas and results pointing to significant
improvements.”