“At EPFL, researchers challenge a fundamental law and discover that more electromagnetic energy can be stored in wave-guiding systems than previously thought. The discovery has implications in telecommunications. Working around the fundamental law, they conceived resonant and wave-guiding systems capable of storing energy over a prolonged period while keeping a broad bandwidth. Their trick was to create asymmetric resonant or wave-guiding systems using magnetic fields. The study, which has just been published in Science, was led by Kosmas Tsakmakidis, first at the University of Ottawa and then at EPFL’s Bionanophotonic Systems Laboratory run by Hatice Altug, where the researcher is now doing post-doctoral research. This breakthrough could have a major impact on many fields in engineering and physics. The number of potential applications is close to infinite, with telecommunications, optical detection systems and broadband energy harvesting representing just a few examples.”
Related Content
Related Posts:
- A 100-year-old physics problem has been solved at EPFL
- Bridging light and electrons
- Turning glass into a ‘transparent’ light-energy harvester
- An ink for 3D-printing flexible devices without mechanical joints
- Energy scientists unravel the mystery of gold’s glow
- A “quantum leap” at room temperature
- Redefining energy efficiency in data processing
- Making a femtosecond laser out of glass
- Ultrathin films achieve record hydrogen-nitrogen separation
- Analog & digital: best of both worlds in one energy-efficient system