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Cardiff University researchers developing technology needed to navigate autonomous cars

The technology has been developed by researchers at the Institute for Compound Seminconductors

Professor Diana Huffaker

Compound semi conductor technology designed to power the next generation of high-speed data communications has been developed by researchers at Cardiff University.

The  team from the Institute for Compound Semiconductors worked with collaborators to innovate an ultrafast and highly sensitive ‘avalanche photodiode’ (APD) that creates less electronic ‘noise’ than its silicon rivals.

APDs are highly sensitive semiconductor devices that exploit the ‘photoelectric effect’ – when light hits a material - to convert light to electricity.

Faster, supersensitive APDs are in demand worldwide for use in high-speed data communications and light detection and ranging (LIDAR) systems for autonomous vehicles.

A paper outlining the breakthrough in creating extremely low excess noise and high sensitivity APDs is published today in Nature Photonics .

Cardiff researchers led by Sêr Cymru Professor Diana Huffaker, scientific director of ICS and Sêr Cymru chair in advanced engineering and materials, partnered with the University of Sheffield and the California NanoSystems Institute, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to develop the technology.

Prof Huffaker said: “Our work to develop extremely low excess noise and high sensitivity avalanche photodiodes has the potential to yield a new class of high-performance receivers for applications in networking and sensing.

“The innovation lies in the advanced materials development using molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) to “grow” the compound semiconductor crystal in an atom-by-atom regime.