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  In the high-tech world, sapphires go where sand cannot


September 16, 2012


The optical properties of corundum, which are are most brilliantly displayed by rubies and sapphires, are well known to gemstone professionals. Now it seems that the crystalline form of aluminium oxide may be doing more than grace fine jewelry, but it could become a standard feature of computers and high-speed communications.

Publishing their finding in respected academic journal specializing in light-based technologies, Nature Photonics, researchers at Clemson University in the United States have reported that they have made more effective optic fibers using sapphires, than the standard optical fibers that are made with silica, which is produced from sand.

According to John Ballato, director of the Center for Optical Materials Science and Engineering Technologies at Clemson University, silica is now being pushed to its limits for faster and cheaper data and new functionality. There is so much light packed in fiber cable that the silica material is struggling to handle the intensity, he explained.

"At high power, the light causes the atoms of the material to vibrate more violently and those vibrations convert some of the light energy into sound energy which restricts the ability of the fiber to carry more power," Ballato stated. "This, in turn, lessens the amount of light that can travel through the fiber, which limits the amount of information that can be sent for telecommunications uses and power for high-energy laser applications."

Ballato and his team discovered that sapphires avoid many of the problems exhibited by silica during high density communications. "Sapphire is scalable, acceptable and is a material that people don't think about when it comes to fiber optics," he said.

But the road to sapphire powered fiber optic network requires some additional work. Corundum's crystalline structure does not allow the production of optical fiber using commercially accepted methods.

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