Dow Corning and IBM Scientists Develop New Materials for Board-Level Photonics

Updated

Dow Corning and IBM Scientists Develop New Materials for Board-Level Photonics

  • Scientists developed a new flexible polymer material made of high-performance silicone to create optical waveguides on printed circuit boards that can withstand extreme operating heat and humidity with no measurable degradation in performance.

  • The materials can be fabricated into waveguides using conventional manufacturing techniques available today.

  • Board-level waveguides will help pave the way for the low-cost integration of photonics in energy-efficient supercomputers and data centers.

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Today at the Photonics West conference, Dow Corning and IBM scientists unveiled a major step in photonics, using a new type of polymer material to transmit light instead of electrical signals within supercomputers and data centers. This new silicone-based material offers better physical properties, including robustness and flexibility, making it ideal for applications in Big Data and for the development of future exascale computers, which are capable of performing a billion billion computations per second.

With exabytes of structured and unstructured data growing annually at 60 percent, scientists have been researching a range of technological advancements to drastically reduce the energy required to move all that data from the processor to the printed circuit board within a computer. Optical interconnect technology offers bandwidth and power efficiency advantages compared to established electrical signaling.


"Polymer waveguides provide an integrated means to route optical signals similar to how copper lines route electrical signals," explains Dr. Bert Jan Offrein, manager of the Photonics Research Group at IBM Research. "Our design is highly flexible, resistant to high temperatures and has strong adhesion properties - these waveguides were designed with no compromises."

In a collaboration with Dow Corning, the scientists for the first time fabricated thin sheets of optical waveguide that show no curling and can bend to a 1 mm radius and is stable at extreme operating conditions including 85 percent humidity and 85°C. This new polymer, based on silicone materials, offers an optimized combination of properties for integration in established electrical printed circuit board technology. In addition, the material can be fabricated into waveguides using conventional manufacturing techniques available today.

"Dow Corning's breakthrough polymer waveguide silicone has positioned us at the forefront of a new era in robust, data-rich computing, especially as we continue to collaborate with outstanding industry leaders like IBM," said Eric Peeters, vice president, Dow Corning Electronic Solutions. "Optical waveguides made from Dow Corning's silicone polymer technology offer customers revolutionary new options for transmitting data substantially faster, and with lower heat and energy consumption. We are confident that silicone-based board-level interconnects will quickly supersede conventional electronic signal distribution to deliver the amazing speeds needed for tomorrow's supercomputers."

A presentation (entitled Stable and Easily Processable Optical Silicones for Low-Loss Polymer Waveguides) given here by Brandon Swatowski, application engineer for Dow Corning Electronics Solutions, reported that fabrication of full waveguide builds can be completed in less than 45 minutes, and enable a high degree of process flexibility. Silicone polymer material, which is dispensed as a liquid, processes more quickly than competitive waveguide materials such as glass and does not require a controlled atmosphere chamber.

Swatowski's presentation went on to say that waveguide builds based on the silicone polymer showed excellent adhesion to polyimide substrates. It also discussed how optical characterization of the new polymer waveguides silicones showed losses as low as 0.03 dB/cm, with environmental stability extending past 2,000 hours exposure to high humidity and temperature, and good performance sustained over 500 thermal cycles between -40°C and 120°C.

For a copy of Swatowski's paper please visit:
http://www.dowcorning.com/content/publishedlit/11-3377-01.pdf

About IBM

For more information visit www.research.ibm.com

About Dow Corning

Dow Corning (dowcorning.com) provides performance-enhancing solutions to serve the diverse needs of more than 25,000 customers worldwide. A global leader in silicones, silicon-based technology and innovation, Dow Corning offers more than 7,000 products and services via the company's Dow Corning® and XIAMETER® brands. Dow Corning is equally owned by The Dow Chemical Company and Corning, Incorporated. More than half of Dow Corning's annual sales are outside the United States. Dow Corning's global operations adhere to the American Chemistry Council's Responsible Care® initiative, a stringent set of standards designed to advance the safe and secure management of chemical products and processes.

A trusted innovation partner, Dow Corning Electronics Solutions helps customers drive future developments in electronics markets such as consumer electronics, data networking, electrical and conventional transportation, energy conversion, LED lighting, and power electronics. Solutions span the entire value chain, from semiconductor fabrication, to device packaging and complete module and system assembly. For more than 70 years, leading electronics companies around the world have turned to Dow Corning for high performance materials and technologies, advanced application expertise, reliable supply and customer service around the globe.

Follow Dow Corning on Twitter: www.Twitter.com/dowcorning
Visit Dow Corning's YouTube channel: www.YouTube.com/dowcorningcorp

® Dow Corning is a registered trademark of Dow Corning Corporation.

® XIAMETER is a registered trademark of Dow Corning Corporation.

® Responsible Care is a registered service mark of the American Chemistry Council, Inc.

Images: http://flickr.com/gp/ibm_research_zurich/67kqXx



Dow Corning
Mirella Kimpen, +32.64.888.413 (Belgium)
mirella.kimpen@dowcorning.com
or
Dan McCarthy, +1.413.448.2260, Extension 200 (United States)
dmccarthy@ahminc.com
or
IBM
Christopher P. Sciacca, +41.44.724.84.43 (Switzerland)
CIA@zurich.ibm.com

KEYWORDS: United States North America California Michigan

INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:

The article Dow Corning and IBM Scientists Develop New Materials for Board-Level Photonics originally appeared on Fool.com.

Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 - 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Advertisement