Researchers at the University of California, Davis, have shrunk a lab-grade spectrometer down to the size of a grain of sand, making a tiny spectrometer-on-a-chip that can be integrated into portable devices. The solution addresses the bottleneck posed by the long physical path that results from obtaining measurement of the intensity of each color. The use of a prism or grating, and the long physical light path, makes spectrometers inherently bulky.
“We wanted to take this power [of a spectrometer] out of the lab and put it in your pocket,” said Ahasan Ahamed, a postdoctoral scientist in the lab of Saif Islam, professor and chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and the corresponding paper’s first author.
In the current work, instead of physically separating each color, the device uses 16 distinct silicon detectors, each engineered to respond slightly differently to incoming light. This is analogous to giving a handful of specialized sensors a mixed drink, with each sensor sampling a different aspect of the drink. The key to deciphering the original recipe is the second part of the invention: artificial intelligence.
The heart of this innovation lies into technological breakthroughs. First, the researchers engineered the surfaces of standard silicon photodiodes with specialized photon-trapping surface textures. Silicon is typically effective at sensing visible light but is poor at sensing near-infrared light, which is critical for many applications. The photon-trapping surface forces near-infrared light to scatter within the thin silicon layer instead of passing straight through. This dramatically increases the likelihood that the silicon absorbs light, making the entire chip sensitive across a broad spectral range.
This microscopic chip uses photon-trapping surface nanostructures and AI to extend silicon's spectral range into the near-infrared, simulating the capabilities of a spectrometer. Courtesy of the University of California, Davis.
Beyond color detection, the design employs high-speed sensors to provide an inherent, ultra-fast capability for measuring photon lifetime. This temporal precision allows the device to capture fleeting light-matter interactions that are invisible to traditional instruments.
Second, the chip uses a powerful fully connected neural network. Since the 16 unique detectors only capture encoded, noisy signals, the AI is trained on thousands of examples to learn the complex, hidden relationship between the detectors' raw outputs and the original, pure light spectrum. The AI addresses this "inverse problem," reconstructing the light spectrum with high accuracy (around 8 nm resolution). This computational method completely removes the need for bulky optics.
The system has a minimal footprint of 0.4 mm2, high sensitivity, and strong noise resistance. The AI augmented chip can maintain signal clarity even in the presence of significant electrical interference, which is a major challenge in portable, low-cost electronics. By extending the sensing range of silicon into the near-infrared spectrum while enabling high performance through machine learning, this technology will bring integrated, real-time hyperspectral sensing across applications ranging from advanced medical diagnostics to environmental remote sensing.
“We are paving the way for a future where your watch or phone doesn’t just take pictures,” Islam said, the project’s principal investigator, “[but] analyzes the chemistry of the world around you.”
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