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Explorer
Optoelectronics/Photonics
Technology Analyst: Benjamin Gross
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Viewpoints
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Viewpoints
  2008
June - Developments in Military Laser Technology
May - The Fiber-to-the-Home Market Update
April - Optical Correlators
March - Holograms: Not Just an Opportunity Illusion
February - Infrared Sensors and Thermal Imaging
 
  2007
Dec/Jan - 2007: The Year in Review
Look for These Developments in 2008
November - Seeing the Changes and Opportunities with CMOS Image Sensors
October - Government-Funded High-Power Laser Applications
September - Opportunities in Ultrashort Pulsed Lasers
Recent Developments: Intel's 40-Gbit/s Hybrid Silicon Laser
Announcement: Explorer Technology Area Virtual Environments Becomes Virtual Worlds
August - High Fiber
July - How Many Organizations Does It Take to Standardize a Lightbulb?
New Technology Area: User Interfaces
June - Fiber: Come Home Soon
May - This Little Light of Mine: Recent Developments in CMOS Photonics
April - Opportunitiy: Biomedical and Industrial Applications
March - Opportunities: Optical-Communications Applications
February - Opportunity: LED-Based Solid-State Lighting
 
  1996–2006 Viewpoints archive  >>



About This Technology

This Technology Map follows developments in technologies that enable the emission, detection, and harnessing or manipulation of light and in their applications and markets. The terms optoelectronics and photonics are often synonymous. This Technology Map focuses primarily on minute devices, which manufacturers often produce using semiconductor fabrication, such as diode lasers and photodetectors, optical amplifiers, switches, light-emitting diodes, and passive components that can route, combine, and split up light. These devices enable the storage and high-speed communication of information, and they could revolutionize the lighting business. Materials for optoelectronics include semiconductors, nonlinear crystals, nanoparticle materials, and optically active polymers.

The main demand for photonic components comes from makers of fiber-optic communications systems, optical storage systems, instrumentation, and lighting. Telecommunications systems continue to be the largest market, and demand is now increasing for use of optoelectronics and photonics in shorter-distance networks: metro networks, optical local-area networks, storage-area networks, and optical backplanes in computing. If developers can keep reducing component prices and improving integration and packaging, photonics could support communication between chips and even on the chip, as faster and faster speeds become necessary and as electronic interconnects reach their limitations. New, more powerful optical storage devices will also be possible as researchers produce lasers with shorter and shorter wavelengths. Moreover, the relatively recent advent of blue lasers and blue and white LEDs will have a substantial impact on displays and lighting. Last, lasers are finding more uses in industrial and medical applications; these segments have become some of the fastest growing in the recent past.

Optoelectronic and photonic components are part of the "black boxes" behind today's communications systems. Without them, the cost of communication would be much greater, and bandwidth bottlenecks would be much worse: Optoelectronics is truly a driver of the information age. Though optical interconnection competes with electrical wiring, many companies provide both types of interconnection. Similarly, although white LED lighting will soon be more energy efficient and cooler than any other illumination technology—and at comparable price a few years thereafter, mass adoptions of white LEDs as incandescent-bulb replacements will still hinge on nontechnical factors such as public education and awareness and establishment of proper sales channels. What is certain is that white LEDs will replace cold-cathode fluorescent lamps as the leading type of light source for liquid-crystal–display backlighting, and they will soon be the light source of choice for future automobiles.



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