Scientists at Monash University have created a tiny new circuit that can generate, direct and read information carried by light, all within a single chip.
This advance is an important milestone for a growing field of research known as “valleytronics” and could help facilitate faster computing, lower energy consumption, and future breakthroughs in quantum technology.
Developed by researchers at the Monash School of Physics and Astronomy, this new device combines advanced nanotechnology and cutting-edge materials to solve a challenge that has limited the field for many years.
For the first time, the team has built a fully integrated chip that can generate specialized optical signals, guide them along specific paths, and convert them into electrical signals within the same compact system.
These signals use a quantum property called “valley degrees of freedom” to store information. Scientists believe that this unique property could provide entirely new ways to encode, transmit, and process data.
Integrated Valleytronics chip solves long-standing challenges
Lead author Dr. Chi Li. The team’s research results are natural photonicssaid this result addresses a major obstacle in valleytronics research.
“Until now, we have been able to generate and detect these signals, but not all in one integrated device,” Dr. Lee said.
“What we’ve built is a complete on-chip system that can create, route, and read this information with very high precision.”
The device utilizes ultra-thin material, only a few atoms thick. These materials are combined with specially designed nanostructures designed to precisely control light at very small scales.
Dr Kaijian Xing, co-lead author of the study and a research fellow at Monash University, explained that the team had developed a practical way to combine these elements.
“We take a simple stacking approach to integrate ultrathin materials with metasurfaces, overcoming the technical challenges of direct material growth on photonic structures and enabling further advances in valleytronics,” said Dr. Singh.
Room temperature photonic technology
One of the most important advantages of this technology is that it operates at room temperature. Many quantum systems require extremely cold environments, making them more difficult and expensive to use in real-world applications.
Senior author Dr Haoran Ren, ARC Future Fellow and leader of the Monash NanoMeta Group, said this research could pave the way to a new generation of small photonic devices that are programmable and highly efficient.
According to Dr. Ren, this technology has the potential to support faster computing systems, reduce energy consumption, and enable new methods for secure communications and advanced data processing.
“This is an important step toward scalable chip-based technologies that use light instead of electricity to process information,” Dr. Ren said.
“Photonic devices use light to achieve massive bandwidth, ultra-fast data transmission rates, and low energy consumption. So what we have achieved has great potential for applications in quantum computing, advanced imaging, and next-generation optical communication systems.”
Processing multiple information streams
To demonstrate the chip’s capabilities, the researchers were able to encode and process two separate images simultaneously. This experiment showed that this device can manage multiple information streams simultaneously. This is an important feature for future computing technologies.
Professor Stephen A. Mayer, head of Monash University’s School of Physics and Astronomy and Nanophotonics Laboratory, said this development will help bridge the gap between fundamental scientific discoveries and practical technologies.
“This is an important step towards a fully integrated Valleytronic system,” said Professor Meyer. “Combining light and quantum materials on a chip gives us access to new ways to encode and process information.”
This international project brought together researchers from Australia, China, Singapore, Germany and Japan, combining expertise in nanophotonics, two-dimensional materials and optoelectronics.
The Monash University team included Dr Chi Li, Dr Kaijian Xing, Professor Michael S. Fuhrer, Professor Stefan A. Maier and Dr Haoran Ren. Additional donations were received from the Singapore University of Technology and Design, Munich LMU and the University of Technology Sydney.

