University researchers have uncovered a way to manipulate glass that could help radically speed up computer data transfer and processing times by drawing on the power of light.

The material could potentially allow computers to transfer information using light and, in turn, speed up system processing speeds, researchers from the University of Surrey, University of Cambridge and the University of Southampton have announced.

Using a process called ion doping, the researchers were able to alter the electronic properties of amorphous chalcogenides, a glass-like material used in CDs and DVDs, so light could be used to bring together different computing functions into one component to create all-optical systems.

This has positive implications for the IT industry, as computer systems currently rely on electrical signals to pass on information, whereas the internet uses optical systems to transfer information at the speed of light.

When a piece of information is sent over the internet using light, it has to be converted to an electrical signal once it reaches a computer, which slows the processing and delivery of it.

Thanks to the work of the researchers, the need to transform the light signal into an electrical one could be eradicated, resulting in consistently higher transfer speeds.