
A new technique can detect terahertz
waves at room temperature quickly and accurately (Image: University of Michigan)
Image
Gallery (3 images)
Engineers know very well how to manipulate a wide spectrum of electromagnetic
waves to send and receive signals. However, waves with frequencies ranging from
0.1 to 10 THz have so far been a very difficult customer.
Their frequencies are too high to be measured directly by current-gen
electronics, so scientists must rely on measuring their physical properties,
such as their energy and wavelength. We have ways to do just that, but they are
highly inefficient and impractical because, among other things, such devices
need to be cooled down to work properly.
A
team led by Prof. Jay Guo at the University of Michigan has designed and tested
a transducer that fills this so-called "terahertz gap"
by turning the very high-frequency terahertz waves into ultrasound, which we
already know how to process. More importantly, the system does so in a reliable
and convenient way, and can operate at room temperature.
Here's how it works. When waves in the terahertz range hit the transducer, their
energy is absorbed by carbon nanotubes and turned into heat. The heat expands
a fine network of spongy polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)
plastic, creating a pressure wave in the ultrasound range, one thousand
times too high for human ears to pick up. Finally, a
microring resonator only a few millimeters in diameter picks up and measures
the ultrasound waves.
This
device has a response speed of less than one millionth of a second,
which is four orders of magnitude faster than similar
devices. This allows it to detect individual pulses of terahertz waves,
rather than just continuous streams.
Finding a practical way to interact with this part of the electromagnetic
spectrum opens up exciting new possibilities. For one, every object a few
degrees above absolute zero emits black-body radiation on this spectrum.
Detecting those waves would allow us to accurately image objects at a distance,
from drugs and weapons at the airport to interstellar
dust in the far reaches of the Milky Way.
Moreover, because the waves in this spectrum are thought to be harmless to the
human body (only causing a mild increase in temperature), they could also be
used for safer and more effective medical imaging and diagnostics.
The
advance is described in the latest issue of the journal Nature Photonics.
Source: Gizmag URL: http://www.gizmag.com/terahertz-waves-detection/32244/
University of Michigan