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wireless – Progress in Research

Optical wireless may no longer have any obstacles

Optical wireless may no longer have any obstacles. A study by Politecnico di Milano, conductedtogether with Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna in Pisa, the University of Glasgow and Stanford University, and published in the prestigious journal Nature Photonics, has made it possible to create photonic chips that mathematically calculate the optimal shape of light to best pass through any environment, even one that is unknown or changing over time.

The problem is well known: light is sensitive to any form of obstacle, even very small ones. Think, for example, of how we see objects when looking through a frosted window or simply when our glasses get foggy. The effect is quite similar on a beam of light carrying data streams in optical wireless systems: the information, while still present, is completely distorted and extremely difficult to retrieve.  

The devices developed in this research are small silicon chips that serve as smart transceivers: working in pairs, they can automatically and autonomously ‘calculate’ what shape a beam of light needs to be in order to pass through a generic environment with maximum efficiency. Not only that: at the same time they can also generate many overlapping beams, each with its own shape, and direct them without them interfering with each other. This makes it possible to significantly increase transmission capacity, just as required by next-generation wireless systems.  

Our chips are mathematical processors that make calculations on light very quickly and efficiently, almost with no energy consumption. The optical beams are generated through simple algebraic operations, essentially sums and multiplications, performed directly on the light signals and transmitted by micro-antennas directly integrated on the chips. This technology offers many advantages: extremely easy processing, high energy efficiency and an enormous bandwidth exceeding 5000 GHz

Francesco Morichetti, Head of the Photonic Devices Lab

‘Today, all information is digital, but in fact, images, sounds and all data are inherently analogue. Digitisation does allow for very complex processing, but as the volume of data increases, these operations become increasingly less sustainable in terms of energy and computation. Today, there is great interest in returning to analogue technologies, through dedicated circuits (analogue co-processors) that will serve as enablers for the 5G and 6G wireless interconnection systems of the future. Our chips work just like that’, stresses Andrea Melloni, Director of Polifab, Politecnico di Milano’s micro and nanotechnology centre.

The activity is co-funded under the NRRP by the RESTART research and development programme ‘RESearch and innovation on future Telecommunications systems and networks, to make Italy more smart’, in which Prof. Andrea Melloni of Politecnico di Milano and Prof. Piero Castoldi of the TeCIP Institute of the Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna in Pisa are coordinating the HePIC and Rigoletto projects, which aim to build prototypes in integrated photonics and future optical communications networks enabling the 6G infrastructure.


SeyedinNavadeh, S., Milanizadeh, M., Zanetto, F. et al.
Determining the optimal communication channels of arbitrary optical systems using integrated photonic processors.
Nat. Photon. (2023).

Optical wireless: the new frontier for communication

In the field of cable transmission, the advent of optical fibres represented an epochal technological leap, allowing light to be used to transfer enormous amounts of data, and they now form the basic infrastructure of the Internet and global telecommunications systems.

For wireless communications too, it is expected that optical connections will soon represent the new frontier. Similarly to what happens in optical fibres, even in free space, light can travel in the form of beams having different shapes, called “modes”, and each of these modes can carry a flow of information. Generating, manipulating and receiving more modes therefore means transmitting more information. The problem is that free space is a much more hostile, variable and unpredictable environment for light than an optical fibre. Obstacles, atmospheric agents or more simply the wind encountered along the way, can alter the shape of the light beams, mix them and make them at first sight unrecognisable and unusable.    

A study by the Politecnico di Milano, conducted together with Stanford University, the Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna in Pisa and the University of Glasgow and published in the prestigious journal Light: Science & Applications, has found a way to separate and distinguish optical beams even if they are superimposed and the form in which they arrive at their destination is drastically changed and unknown.

This operation is made possible by a programmable photonic processor built on a silicon chip of just 5 mm2. The processor created is able to receive all the optical beams through a multitude of microscopic optical antennas integrated on the chip, to manipulate them through a network of integrated interferometers and to separate them on distinct optical fibres, eliminating mutual interference. This device allows information quantities of over 5,000 Ghz to be managed, at least 100 times greater than current high-capacity wireless systems.

The activity is funded by the European Horizon 2020 Superpixels project, which aims to create next-generation sensor and imaging systems by exploiting the on-chip manipulation of light signals

The studio is authored among the others by Francesco Morichetti, head of the Photonic Devices Lab and Andrea Melloni, director of Polifab, the Politecnico di Milano centre for micro and nanotechnologies.

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