The smallest nanowire spectrometers

Jianji DONG

Front. Optoelectron. ›› 2019, Vol. 12 ›› Issue (4) : 341-341.

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Front. Optoelectron. ›› 2019, Vol. 12 ›› Issue (4) : 341-341. DOI: 10.1007/s12200-019-0983-5
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The smallest nanowire spectrometers

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Jianji DONG. The smallest nanowire spectrometers. Front. Optoelectron., 2019, 12(4): 341‒341 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12200-019-0983-5
Optical spectroscopy is a versatile characterization technique for a wide range of applications. Developing miniaturized spectrometers is the trend for applications in which small footprint takes precedence over high resolution. However, development of micro-spectrometers based on miniaturized or integrated optics is approaching a bottleneck toward submillimeter scales because of the inherent scale limitation of their optical components or path lengths. Although these constraints can be circumvented with computational spectral reconstruction by addressing a full range of spectral components simultaneously at multiple detectors, complex millimeter-scale arrays of individually prepared filters arranged over charge-coupled device or complementary metal-oxide semiconductor detectors are difficult to be miniaturized.
By compositionally engineering a single nanowire and electronically probing the photocurrent at a series of points along the nanowire, Zongyin Yang and his co-workers from Cambridge University [1] designed and demonstrated an ultracompact microspectrometer, which is capable of accurate computational spectrum reconstruction in the visible-range. The entire active element of the spectrometer is scaled down to a footprint of just hundreds of nanometers in width and tens of micrometers in length. By means of a spatial point-scanning strategy, the nanowire spectrometer can realize spectral imaging for applications in many fields, such as astronomy and bio-detection. Furthermore, they demonstrate lensless, single-cell-scale in situ spectral imaging by a shift register strategy, which is benefited by the microscale nanowire spectrometer units. This work could open new opportunities for many miniaturized spectroscopic applications.

References

[1]
Yang Z, Albrow-Owen T, Cui H, Alexander-Webber J, Gu F, Wang X, Wu T C, Zhuge M, Williams C, Wang P, Zayats A V, Cai W, Dai L, Hofmann S, Overend M, Tong L, Yang Q, Sun Z, Hasan T. Single-nanowire spectrometers. Science, 2019, 365(6457): 1017–1020
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