Ultra-fast optical memory and flip-flop exploiting optical fiber and SOAs

Author(s):  
Antonella Bogoni
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amr Hassan ◽  
Nihal F. F. Areed ◽  
Salah S. A. Obayya ◽  
Hamdi El Mikati

Abstract The paper presents a different type of designing methods and operational improvements of the optical logic memory SR-flip flop (SR-FF). The proposed optical memory SR-FF is based on two optical NOR logic gates which use two-dimension (2D) photonic crystal (PhC) with a square lattice of silicon (Si) dielectric rods. The structure has a switching time in only a few Picoseconds with little power input and very little power loss. The proposed optical memory SR-FF has a small dimension 38x22 μm2 which makes it one of the best optimized and most practical structures to be used in all photonic integrated circuits (PICs). The ultra-compact size enables the possibility of multiple devices to be embedded in a single PIC chip.


Author(s):  
Kousik Mukherjee ◽  
Anjan Samanta ◽  
Paresh Chandra Jana

In this paper, we discuss a possibility to realize the optical bistability in a rotating semiconductor micro-cavity system. To study the mean cavity photon number profile, we have obtained stationary solution by solving Heisenberg–Langevin equations of motion. In a rotating semiconductor micro-cavity system, bistability is observed when the cavity is driven externally in one direction but not the other direction. The bistable behavior is possible for strong coupling regime, and this can be controlled by hopping strength, decay rates and pump power. The photon profile also shows tunable zero intensity window. The system may be useful to design all-optical switch and optical flip–flop i.e., optical memory element, which would be faster in applications and compact in size.


1995 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 1119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takehiro Fukushima ◽  
Toyokazu Sakamoto

Author(s):  
P.-Y. Bony ◽  
M. Guasoni ◽  
E. Assémat ◽  
S. Pitois ◽  
D. Sugny ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2005 ◽  
Vol 72 ◽  
pp. 177-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Félix M. Goñi ◽  
F-Xabier Contreras ◽  
L-Ruth Montes ◽  
Jesús Sot ◽  
Alicia Alonso

In the past decade, the long-neglected ceramides (N-acylsphingosines) have become one of the most attractive lipid molecules in molecular cell biology, because of their involvement in essential structures (stratum corneum) and processes (cell signalling). Most natural ceramides have a long (16-24 C atoms) N-acyl chain, but short N-acyl chain ceramides (two to six C atoms) also exist in Nature, apart from being extensively used in experimentation, because they can be dispersed easily in water. Long-chain ceramides are among the most hydrophobic molecules in Nature, they are totally insoluble in water and they hardly mix with phospholipids in membranes, giving rise to ceramide-enriched domains. In situ enzymic generation, or external addition, of long-chain ceramides in membranes has at least three important effects: (i) the lipid monolayer tendency to adopt a negative curvature, e.g. through a transition to an inverted hexagonal structure, is increased, (ii) bilayer permeability to aqueous solutes is notoriously enhanced, and (iii) transbilayer (flip-flop) lipid motion is promoted. Short-chain ceramides mix much better with phospholipids, promote a positive curvature in lipid monolayers, and their capacities to increase bilayer permeability or transbilayer motion are very low or non-existent.


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