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Science, Telecommunication

New “supercrystal” could make lasers faster, smaller and more efficient

Monash University 2 mins read

A breakthrough from Monash University could pave the way for faster, smaller and more energy-efficient lasers and other light-based technologies.

Engineers have developed a new type of perovskite material arranged into an ordered “supercrystal.” In this structure, tiny packets of energy called excitons work together rather than individually, allowing the material to amplify light far more efficiently.

The findings, published in Laser & Photonics Reviews, could have applications in communications, sensors and computing, improving the performance of devices that rely on light, such as sensors in autonomous vehicles, medical imaging or electronics.

Corresponding author, Professor Jacek Jasieniak at Monash Materials Science and Engineering, highlighted the potential for faster, more energy-efficient optical devices.

“What’s exciting here is that we’re not changing the material itself, but how it’s organised. By assembling nanocrystals into an ordered supercrystal, the excitations created by light can cooperate rather than compete, which allows light to be amplified much more efficiently,” Professor Jasieniak said.

Dr Manoj Sharma, who led the experimental work at Monash, said their approach revealed new possibilities in nanocrystal assemblies.

“By assembling nanocrystals into a highly ordered supercrystal, we show that optical gain is no longer limited by single-particle biexcitons, which are inefficient and prone to energy losses, but instead arises from collective excitonic interactions across the whole structure,” Dr Sharma said.

Perovskites have gained attention in recent years for solar cells, LEDs, lasers, photodetectors, and other optoelectronic devices because they are easy to make, tunable, and highly efficient.

The work highlights how engineering material structure, not just chemistry, can dramatically improve performance, illustrating how fundamental materials research can open up practical opportunities down the line.

The study was a collaboration with Professor Junhong Yu and colleagues at Chongqing Normal University.

Read the research paper: https://doi.org/10.1002/lpor.202501871

MEDIA ENQUIRIES 

Courtney Karayannis, Media and Communications Manager

Monash University

P: +61 408 508 454

E: Courtney.Karayannis@monash.edu 

GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Monash Media

P: +61 3 9903 4840

E: media@monash.edu


For more experts, news, opinion and analysis, visit Monash News.

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