Skip to main content

How light technology is changing medicine - Sajan Saini

593,809 Views

2,988 Questions Answered

TEDEd Animation

Let’s Begin…

It’s an increasingly common sight in hospitals around the world: a nurse measures our height, weight, blood pressure, and attaches a glowing plastic clip to our finger. Suddenly, a digital screen reads out the oxygen level in our bloodstream. How did that happen? Sajan Saini shows how pairing light with integrated photonics is leading to new medical technologies and less invasive diagnostic tools.

A lab-on-a-chip (LOC) needs to be a disposable technology, to ensure a pristine chamber is available each time for precise measure of a sample. How can complex integrated photonics components like ring resonators be casually sacrificed in such one-time-only use? The answer lies in integration: photonic-based LOCs can be fabricated as a tiled array of many identical chips, on a flat silicon-based wafer. Why would this reduce the cost per unit chip? How would the cost of a penny-sized chip be influenced by production run expense, number of wafers used per run, and wafer size? Which of these factors seem to be more important for mass manufacturing?

Login to answer question

About TED-Ed Animations

TED-Ed Animations feature the words and ideas of educators brought to life by professional animators. Are you an educator or animator interested in creating a TED-Ed Animation? Nominate yourself here »

Meet The Creators

  • Educator Sajan Saini
  • Director Igor Coric
  • Narrator Addison Anderson
  • Animator Nemanja Petrovic
  • Sound Designer Nemanja Petrovic
  • Producer Milica Lapcevic
  • Director of Production Gerta Xhelo
  • Editorial Producer Alex Rosenthal
  • Associate Producer Bethany Cutmore-Scott
  • Fact-Checker Eden Girma

More from Inventions that Shape History