Skip to main content

This futuristic chip transmits data in an entirely new way

this futuristic chip transmits data in an entirely new way img 5968
CU-Boulder/Milos Popovic
While some companies are looking for new ways to charge electronics wirelessly, a handful of researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder are asking a different question: Why are we so reliant on electricity anyway? It takes a lot of power to transmit data via electrical impulses. What if we used something else entirely?

Thanks to a collaboration with UC Berkley and MIT, this feat might finally be approaching viability. That’s because the two schools have come together to devise a “groundbreaking” microprocessor chip that uses light instead of electrical signals to transmit data. The 850 optical input/output components on their new chip give it 10 to 50 times the bandwidth of a processor comprised entirely of electronics. More specifically, we’re looking at about 300Gbps per square millimeter, the schools say.

Recommended Videos

“Light-based integrated circuits could lead to radical changes in computing and network chip architecture in applications ranging from smartphones to supercomputers to large data centers,” said CU-Boulder assistant professor Miloš Popović, “something computer architects have already begun work on in anticipation of the arrival of this technology.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Traditional microprocessor chips—the ones found in everything from laptops to supercomputers—use electrical circuits to communicate with one another and transfer information  In recent years, however, the sheer amount of electricity needed to power the ever-increasing speed and volume of these data transfers has proven to be a limiting factor, the schools say. Switching the transmission mechanism to light instead may help address this problem.

“We figured out how to reuse the same materials and processing steps that comprise the electrical circuits to build high-performance optical devices in the same chip,” said Mark Wade, a Ph.D. candidate at CU-Boulder and a co-lead author of the study, in a press release announcing the breakthrough. “This allows us to design complex electronic-photonic systems that can solve the communication bottleneck in computing.”

The prototype doesn’t shift the boundaries of processing power by any means. In fact, it features just two cores packed on a 3mm × 6mm (0.1 inch × 0.2 inch) integrated circuit. What it does do, however, is show that drawing more electricity isn’t always the solution for producing more powerful components. Instead, we could end up with faster or more energy conservative devices just by fundamentally maneuvering a few elements.

As a result of the research conducted at these higher education institutes, two startup companies have emerged. Of these, Ayar Labs was notably issued the MIT Clean Energy Prize earlier this year.

Gabe Carey
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A freelancer for Digital Trends, Gabe Carey has been covering the intersection of video games and technology since he was 16…
How to transfer your books from Goodreads to StoryGraph
Front page of a book on Onyx BOOX Go 10.3 tablet.

Goodreads has been the only game in town for Android and iOS book-tracking for a long time now, and like most monopolies, it has grown old and fat. Acquired by Amazon in 2013, avid book readers have had lots to complain about in recent years, with the service languishing unloved, with no serious updates and an aging interface. It's been due some serious competition for a long time, and lo and behold, some has arrived. StoryGraph is a book-tracking app that offers everything you'll find on Goodreads but with an algorithm that lets you know about what you might love, and adds features any bibliophile will know are essential — like a Did Not Finish list.

Read more
I played Black Myth: Wukong on the new MSI handheld to prove it was possible
Black Myth: Wukong running on the MSI Claw 8 AI+.

I scoffed when MSI put the Claw 8 AI+ in my hands with Black Myth: Wukong selected. I'd spent 80 hours in the game on my full desktop packing an RTX 4090, and I knew just how demanding the game was. It's a pipedream for a handheld gaming PC.

I pressed Continue and loaded up at the Pool of Shattered Jade rest point -- the ideal spot to farm; if you know, you know -- and proceeded to run up to the cocoons spotted around the area, unleash my spirit ability, and run back. Sitting in a dimly-lit New York City bar, I continued the loop a few more times. I'd done plenty of farming in the game before.

Read more
This is the GPU I’m most excited for in 2025 — and it’s not by Nvidia
The AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX graphics card.

The next few months will completely redefine every ranking of the best graphics cards. With Nvidia's RTX 50-series and AMD's RDNA 4 most likely launching in January -- and even Intel possibly expanding its Battlemage lineup -- there's a lot to look forward to.

But as for me, I already know which GPU I'm most excited about. And no, it's not Nvidia's rumored almighty RTX 5090. The GPU I'm looking forward to is AMD's upcoming flagship, which will presumably be the RX 8800 XT (or perhaps the RX 9070 XT). Below, I'll tell you why I think this GPU is going to be so important not just for AMD but also for the entire graphics card market.
Setting the pace

Read more