Researchers at the Institute of Photonic Chips publishes the breakthrough in Nature Photonics

announcer:adminrelease time:2021-10-15Views:986

Multiplexing is an important concept in the information age for  generating, transmitting, processing and storing data bits for high  capacity. For example, the use of the three-dimensional space can store  more information bits than the two-dimensional space. Although, many  physical principles could provide a platform for a space beyond the  three-dimensional, the reality meets many challenges. Optical  multiplexing is a fast-forward runner in this race because it is a  greener and sustainable solution for the future.

The teams, let by Xiangping Li and Professor Min Gu, at Jinan  University, Ludong University, South China Normal University, National  University of Singapore, University of Shanghai for Science and  Technology (USST), and Guangdong University of Technology h**e jointly  published a paper to provide an innovative platform by optically  twisting big data for a high storage capacity.

“Twisting is an inherent physical property of light, beh**ing as  helical propagation. The helicity is the so called orbital angular  momentum (OAM), which can be physically used as an independent dimension  to store information data bits. The degree of the helicity determines  the capacity in this application,”said Professor Gu Min.

Professor Gu said, the idea of using OAM for optical multiplexing in  optical data storage was proposed in 2010 (Gu and Li, The road to  multi-dimensional bit-by-bit optical data storage, Optics and Photonics  News, July, 2010). He is pleased to see this magnificent idea has been  experimentally implemented though it took more than 10 years to achieve  the idea. Like any scientific pursuit, the key to success is persistent.

The paper “Synthetic Helical Dichroism for Six-Dimensional Optical  Orbital Angular Momentum Multiplexing” is published in Nature Photonics  (DOI :10.1038/s41566-021-00880-1) on October 14.