Researchers at the University of California Davis have developed a spectrometer-on-a-chip that shrinks laboratory-grade chemical analysis technology to the size of a grain of sand. Published in *Advanced Photonics*, the system replaces bulky optical hardware with artificial intelligence and a sensor array to reconstruct light spectra with 8 nm resolution.
Replacing Bulky Optics With AI
Solving the “inverse problem” computationally

Expanding silicon into the near-infrared range
The shift toward specialized AI instrumentation

| Feature | Traditional Spectrometers | AI-Powered Chip |
|---|---|---|
| Core Mechanism | Prisms/Gratings (Physical splitting) | 16 Silicon Detectors + Neural Network |
| Physical Size | Bulky laboratory instruments | Size of a grain of sand |
| NIR Sensitivity | Limited in standard silicon | Enhanced via PTST textures (up to 1100 nm) |
| Resolution | Variable by instrument | Roughly 8 nm |
