News Release

Purdue, Stanford researchers devise novel ultrafast laser beam steering for autonmous cars

Novel light sensing technology is less complex, uses less power

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Purdue University

Novel Laser Light Sensing Technology That is Orders of Magnitude More Sensitive and Faster Than Lead

image: Researchers at Purdue University and Stanford University have found a novel laser light sensing technology that is orders of magnitude more sensitive and faster than leading-edge sensor devices.The technology uses a novel concept of optical frequency-arrayed technique that is more robust. view more 

Credit: (Purdue Research Foundation image)

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Researchers at Purdue University and Stanford University believe they have found a novel laser light sensing technology that is more robust and less expensive than currently available with a wide range of uses, including a way to guide fully autonomous vehicles.

The researchers say their innovation is orders of magnitude faster than conventional leading-edge laser beam steering devices that use phased antenna-array technology. The laser beam steering being tested and used by Purdue and Stanford is based on light-matter interaction between a silicon-based metasurface and short light pulses produced for example by a mode-locked laser with a frequency-comb spectrum. Such a beam-steering device can scan a large angle of view in nanoseconds or picoseconds compared with the microseconds current technology takes.

"This technology is far less complex and uses less power than existing technologies," said Amr Shaltout, a post-doctoral research fellow in Materials Science and Engineering at Stanford who conceived the idea for the method.

"The technology merges two different fields of nanophotonic metasurfaces and ultrafast optics."

Laser beam steering is a vital technology that can be used in a wide variety of areas including navigation, space flights, radar applications, imaging, tag-scanners, robotics, archaeology, mapping and atmospheric physics. Faster laser scanning is directly related to higher frame rates as well as improved imaging resolution.

Shaltout came up with the concept while earning his Ph.D. from the Vladimir Shalaev research group at Purdue's School of Electrical and Computer Engineering and delineated it at Stanford when working with the research group of Mark Brongersma.

"The idea proposed by Amr is so powerful that we were honestly surprised that nobody did it before because it is so simple, so efficient, much easier than what people used so far and works much faster," said Shalaev, the Bob and Anne Burnett Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Purdue. This as a wonderful example of fruitful collaboration between Purdue and Stanford."

The researchers say their innovation is chip-compatible technology that doesn't require additional sources of energy. It is based on light-matter interaction between metasurfaces and short pulses from mode-locked lasers with equally spaced phased-lock frequency lines. Another key element is using a metasurface based on patterned silicon film.

"That's the basis for all of the electronic circuitry at the nanoscale to give this exciting functionality that allows the beam steering to happen," said Brongersma, a professor in Stanford's Department of Materials Science and Engineering.

Autonomous cars depend on light detection and ranging, or lidar, which is similar to radar only instead emits infrared or visible light that measures how long it takes for the pulses to reflect back off objects and take their images. It would replace the spinning device frequently seen atop roofs of autonomous cars. But that existing technology remains expensive as businesses look for ways to transform the burgeoning autonomous car industry.

Shaltout said the use of photonic metasurfaces was key to the new advancement. He said metasurfaces provide simple, compact and power efficient solutions to photonics design. The combination of those two technologies provide a much simpler approach.

In current phased-array optical technology, each antenna needs to be controlled in what it radiates individually. Under Shaltout's system, each of the structures emit slightly different frequencies, meaning there is no need to address each individual antenna continuously and consuming power during that process.

Shaltout said an interdisciplinary solution was the key factor.

"Sometimes working outside our field help us to see, to find solutions to problems in different fields and just link them together," he said.

The challenge for the researchers now is to scale up the innovation and move it from the laboratory to the real world. They are looking for investors, partners or possibly licensing agreements as they work to move forward scaling up the technology. The first developments might be in areas such as scanning devices at stores, airports or in many other areas before moving on to autonomous cars and automobile original equipment manufacturers.

"This seems to be a disruptive solution which could make a big difference in this huge, emerging industry," Shalaev said.

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The technology is jointly owned by Purdue and Stanford. For more information on the technology contact Purdue's Office of Technology Commercialization at OTCIP@prf.org.

About Purdue Office of Technology Commercialization

The Purdue Office of Technology Commercialization operates one of the most comprehensive technology transfer programs among leading research universities in the U.S. Services provided by this office support the economic development initiatives of Purdue University and benefit the university's academic activities. The office is managed by the Purdue Research Foundation, which received the 2016 Innovation and Economic Prosperity Universities Award for Innovation from the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. For more information about funding and investment opportunities in startups based on a Purdue innovation, contact the Purdue Foundry at foundry@prf.org. For more information on licensing a Purdue innovation, contact the Office of Technology Commercialization at innovation@prf.org.

Purdue Research Foundation contact: Tom Coyne, 765-588-1044, tjcoyne@prf.org

Sources:

Amr Shaltou
ashaltout@stanford.edu

Vladimir Shalaev
shalaev@purdue.edu

Mark Brongersma
markb29@stanford.edu


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