Photonics, a branch of physics that covers technical applications of 
light from telecommunications to integrated circuits and sensors, is 
maturing rapidly. Professor Hercules Avramopoulos, the head of the 
Photonics Communications Research Laboratory at the National Technical 
University of Athens, describes the field as being roughly where 
electronics was in the 1960s.
'In the 1960s you had the first integrated circuits. Photonics today
 is at the point of a similar breakthrough that will lead to a wealth of
 applications with widespread benefits for industry and society,' Prof. 
Avramopoulos says.
The trend is being driven in large measure by the growing demand for
 bandwidth and capacity on communications networks - from cell phone 
services to the internet. In addition, the potential for optical systems
 to operate at much higher speeds than traditional electronic circuits 
is driving a need for faster interconnection between datacom systems - 
from server racks to your personal computer.
Although research in the field is progressing in Europe, Asia and 
the United States, the sector continues to face several challenges. Not 
least, in the case of Europe, from the disparate and diverse nature of 
the research institutes, university departments and companies involved 
in photonics research and development - among them a large number of 
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
'Photonics is maturing rapidly but it is still not at the stage 
where you can go down to your local shop and buy photonic products as 
you can buy equivalent electronic goods. Much of the field is still in 
the phase of researching and experimentation - and doing an experiment 
in photonics often involves using very expensive equipment and devices 
that are not broadly available. In addition, you need expertise, often 
multidisciplinary in order to combine knowledge in the physics of 
materials with expertise in the field of application. In general you 
cannot find all these ingredients in individual laboratories,' Prof. 
Avramopoulos explains.
In order to overcome these problems, academic and research 
institutes from 12 European countries came together in the 'Pan-European
 photonics task force: integrating Europe's expertise on photonic 
subsystems' (EURO-FOS) project with the support of more than EUR 4 
million in funding from the European Commission. The consortium put in 
place the networks and tools necessary to pool resources and technology 
among a multitude of organisations working on photonics research across 
Europe, while at the same time helping photonics researchers to share 
knowledge and expertise. Over the course of four years they carried out 
close to 100 joint experiments, involving in-excess of 300 young 
researchers at the doctorate and post-doctorate level.
'The EURO-FOS Network of Excellence (NoE) was driven by the need to 
enhance and assist collaboration between organisations and researchers 
across Europe. The project achieved that with great success,' Prof. 
Avramopoulos, who coordinated EURO-FOS, explains.
A pan-European photonics laboratory
The 17 organisations that made up the EURO-FOS NoE have extensive 
expertise in the design, development and testing of photonic components 
and subsystems that are applicable in high-capacity light-wave 
communications networks. By clustering together they were able to share 
their know-how and innovations amongst each other and with other 
organisations working in the field in an ambitious initiative that has 
led to the creation of a powerful pan-European virtual laboratory.
Called 'Eurofoslab', the laboratory pooled state-of-the-art 
components, devices, subsystems, testbeds and access to deployed optical
 fibre links. Its resources are physically located at the 17 
laboratories of the network, but are centrally administrated by means of
 web tools developed by the University of Essex in the United Kingdom. 
The tools enable the reservation of shared resources and scheduling of 
joint experiments using equipment across Europe.
The inventory of Eurofoslab contains more than 700 items, including 
48 complete systems and testbeds, such as terabit-per-second 'Optical 
time-division multiplexing' (OTDM) and 'Orthogonal frequency-division 
multiplexing' (OFDM) testbeds, coherent 'Wave Division 
Multiplexing´(WDM) testbeds, WDM transmission systems at 1550 and 1310 
nanometres, 'Radio over Fibre' (RoF) systems based on single-mode and 
multimode fibres, and many others. It also includes more than 50 
self-standing subsystems such as complete 'optical line terminals' 
(OLTs), 'optical network units' (ONUs), transmitters, receivers and 
regeneration units, as well as a large number of photonic and 
optoelectronic devices, 14 simulation platforms and access to four 
installed fibre links.
'The sorts of experiments that Eurofoslab has enabled would not be 
possible for individual laboratories. Working together with more 
resources at hand, researchers have been able to embark on more 
ambitious, large-scale experimental endeavours,' the EURO-FOS 
coordinator says. 'In addition it has helped create economies of scale 
in the development, testing and validation of photonic subsystems and 
systems.'
Work conducted via Eurofoslab within the scope of the EURO-FOS 
project has focused on four key areas of photonics research: digital 
optical transmission systems; optical sources and amplification; 
high-speed optical network subsystems; and next-generation optical 
access subsystems.
The work so far has resulted in more than 200 scientific 
publications and the filing of seven patents. In addition, the network 
has opened up collaboration opportunities with other organisations 
around the world and has strengthened ties between the academic 
community and industry.
'Everybody knows what a cell phone is, for example, but they don't 
always know about the underlying technology that makes it work and how 
innovation could make it work better. As photonics technology matures it
 will go from experimental research applications to find its way into an
 increasing number of applications in the real world with potentially 
enormous benefits for everyone. EURO-FOS has made a considerable 
contribution toward that goal,' Prof. Avramopoulos says.
EURO-FOS received research funding under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Link to project on CORDIS:
- 
FP7 on CORDIS- 
EURO-FOS project factsheet on CORDIS
Link to project's website:
- 
'Pan-European photonics task force: integrating Europe's expertise on photonic subsystems' website- 
Website for the 'Eurofoslab' pan-European virtual laboratory
Other links:
- 
European Commission's Digital Agenda website