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Physics News Update
Number 667, December 30, 2003 by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and James Riordon

World's First Light Emitting Transistor

Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have developed the world's first light emitting transistor (LET). Unlike conventional transistors, which include an electrical input port and an electrical output port, the new LET also has an infrared optical output port (see image).

The LET is built of indium gallium phosphide and gallium arsenide, rather than the silicon and germanium used in many conventional transistors. Although the LET produces light in essentially the same way that light emitting diodes (LEDs) operate, the transistor can modulate light at much higher speeds. To date, the researchers (N. Holonyak, Jr., blpayne@.uiuc.edu, 217-333-4149) have managed to modulate the optical LET output at a frequency of one megahertz, but much higher speeds are theoretically possible.

Although it's too early to predict the various applications for LETs, the hybrid device should help integrate electrical and optical circuitry designs with one convenient, high-speed package. It is only fitting that the research team that developed the LET include the inventor of the first visible LED (Holonyak) and the developer of the world's fastest bipolar transistor (Feng). (M. Feng et al., Applied Physics Letters, 5 January 2004).

Glial Cells and Epilepsy

Is there a connection? Neurons are not the only cells in the brain. In fact, 90% of brain matter consists of glial cells. Astrocytes, the most common glial cell type, don't have enough sodium channels to carry on the active electrochemical signaling characteristic of neurons, but they can communicate with other cells through the diffusion of messenger molecules.

Furthermore, astrocytes can partially or wholly enwrap neuronal synapses, the message sending or receiving ends of the neuron. This facilitates neutron-astrocyte interactions, and even neuron-neuron communications via astrocytes. Formerly glia were thought to play a passive role in the nervous system---cleaning up the potassium needed in the neural firing mechanism. But increasingly scientists believe that glia play a more active role in enhancing or inhibiting action in the synapse.

Suhita Nadkarni and Peter Jung at Ohio University believe that glia participate in the making of epilepsy. There is no accepted theory of epilepsy; does it arise from neurons talking in synchrony or is it a sort of "thunderstorm" of spontaneous activity among neurons? Jung argues that under some conditions the neuron might "listen" so much to its astrocyte environment (by an overexpression of certain receptor molecules) that it enters into a bistable state; even in the absence of outside (normal) stimulation the neuron could fire indiscriminately in the manner characteristic of epilepsy. It is therefore necessary to undertake a sort of electrical engineering study of neural-glial circuitry.

Jung, a physicist (presently at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at UC Santa Barbara, 805-893-7333, jungp@kitp.ucsb.edu), has demonstrated some of this glial-neural behavior in computer simulations and is working with neurobiologists who might shortly put the model to an experimental test. (Nadkarni and Jung, Physical Review Letters, 31 December 2003.)

Improved Tandem Organic LEDs

Stacking organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) leads to brighter, stabler, longer lived light sources than individual OLEDs. Unfortunately, the metal layers typically used to connect the individual elements are not very transparent, reducing the resulting brightness of underlying OLEDs in a tandem configuration.

Researchers in the Display Technology Laboratory at Eastman Kodak Company have now managed to stack OLEDs that are connected through optically transparent, organic semiconductor materials. The improvement in brightness in the new, tandem OLED is essentially linearly related to the number of individual light emitting segments included in the device, that is, a three-segment tandem OLED is roughly three times as bright as a conventional OLED.

High brightness, high efficiency tandem OLEDs could lead to brighter TV's and computer screens. They could also make it easier to read cell phone displays in bright sunlight, which often renders existing cell phone displays unintelligible.

The researchers (contact: L. S. Liao, liang-sheng.liao@kodak.com) propose that tandem OLEDs may also be useful as lighting sources for liquid crystal display backlighting or as solid-state room lights. In addition, varying the number of units in a tandem OLED stack changes the operating voltage, allowing the possibility of tailoring the devices to match different electrical sources, such as household 110 volt systems. Conventional LED lighting, on the other hand, typically requires transformers to adjust power sources to meet the lighting element's electrical specifications. (L. S. Liao et al., Applied Physics Letters, upcoming article)