Several schemes have been proposed to implement all-optical transistors. In many cases, a
proof of concept has been experimentally demonstrated. Among the designs are those based on: •
electromagnetically induced transparency • in an
optical cavity or microresonator, where the transmission is controlled by a weaker flux of gate photons • in free space, i.e., without a resonator, by addressing strongly interacting
Rydberg states • a system of indirect
excitons (composed of bound pairs of
electrons and
holes in double
quantum wells with a static
dipole moment). Indirect excitons, which are created by light and decay to emit light, strongly interact due to their dipole alignment. • a system of microcavity polaritons (
exciton-polaritons inside an
optical microcavity) where, similar to exciton-based optical transistors,
polaritons facilitate effective interactions between photons •
cavity switch modulates cavity properties in time domain for quantum information applications. •
nanowire-based cavities employing polaritonic interactions for optical switching • silicon microrings placed in the path of an optical signal. Gate photons heat the silicon microring causing a shift in the optical resonant frequency, leading to a change in transparency at a given frequency of the optical supply. • a dual-mirror optical cavity that holds around 20,000
cesium atoms trapped by means of
optical tweezers and laser-cooled to a few
microkelvin. The cesium ensemble did not interact with light and was thus transparent. The length of a round trip between the cavity mirrors equaled an integer multiple of the wavelength of the incident light source, allowing the cavity to transmit the source light. Photons from the gate light field entered the cavity from the side, where each photon interacted with an additional "control" light field, changing a single atom's state to be resonant with the cavity optical field, which changing the field's resonance wavelength and blocking transmission of the source field, thereby "switching" the "device". While the changed atom remains unidentified,
quantum interference allows the gate photon to be retrieved from the cesium. A single gate photon could redirect a source field containing up to two photons before the retrieval of the gate photon was impeded, above the critical threshold for a positive gain. • in a concentrated water solution containing iodide anions • Modification of the dielectric material reflectivity to demonstrate attosecond "petahertz" optical switching. • Demonstration the Petahertz Optical Transistor (POT) by light-induced quantum current generation in graphene transistor == See also ==