While interesting this approach is not any faster than the Ge based photodiodes that we have currently. State of the art is ~-110GHz in Germanium Si photonics using standard fabs. This is only 50GHz.
"the signal state transitions were established at less than 20 ps, which is comparable to the bandwidth limit of the oscilloscope utilized at 50 GHz. [...] the initial rise time constant may be shorter than the measurement limits of the oscilloscope."
mmmBacon 2 hours ago [-]
Sure. But it’s on them to prove their claim that the device is faster and they haven’t done that. There are faster scopes and you can rent them.
momoschili 22 hours ago [-]
A key here for western users is that it does not include Ge, which is notably a material that China has a stranglehold on.
glumreaper 14 hours ago [-]
I got the impression that "faster" refers to potential bandwidth, as the device responds to shorter wavelengths (300nm to 1.6nm) than other photodetectors.
Shorter wavelengths means higher frequencies, "number go up" = more data per second.
This is press release language though, it could mean anything.
frainfreeze 21 hours ago [-]
Isn't state of the art already in the 300Ghz range?
mmmBacon 2 hours ago [-]
Sure for InGaAs. The paper is claiming faster for AI so the relevant metric is to compare to what can be shipped today for such applications. To scale for AI we need devices that integrate with standard CMOS processes. More exotic materials can be integrated but they are not very practical for highly integrated systems. NVIDIA’s recent announcement for their copackaged optical switch is in a silicon only ecosystem.
davesque 22 hours ago [-]
This part struck me:
"boosts data transmission and data processing speed, especially in AI applications"
How is this better for "AI" than it would be for any other general computing task? Looks like the AI-crazed execs had a go at this press release.
nashashmi 20 hours ago [-]
Sometimes EXECS want AI oriented products. So every product development team adds that their product serve AI too. Just to get attention to their product .
ChrisMarshallNY 20 hours ago [-]
Probably the case, but I'm not losing sleep over it.
Wasn't that long ago, when I would see the word "blockchain," at least once, in every pitch deck.
momoschili 21 hours ago [-]
what other general computing task leverages the wide bandwidths that optical transceivers provide as well as AI?
I get that AI washing is annoying, but this seems like such a petty thing to be mad at.
JohannMac 3 days ago [-]
Novel approach to optical detection which is faster than current approaches and can be incorporated on an IC.
Rendered at 17:16:34 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
"the signal state transitions were established at less than 20 ps, which is comparable to the bandwidth limit of the oscilloscope utilized at 50 GHz. [...] the initial rise time constant may be shorter than the measurement limits of the oscilloscope."
Shorter wavelengths means higher frequencies, "number go up" = more data per second.
This is press release language though, it could mean anything.
"boosts data transmission and data processing speed, especially in AI applications"
How is this better for "AI" than it would be for any other general computing task? Looks like the AI-crazed execs had a go at this press release.
Wasn't that long ago, when I would see the word "blockchain," at least once, in every pitch deck.
I get that AI washing is annoying, but this seems like such a petty thing to be mad at.