As artificial intelligence strains the physical limits of existing data centres, scientists and investors are turning to the ultimate speed limit of the universe for the next computing frontier: light.
For Mi Lei, founder of CAS Star, a venture capital firm born out of the state-run Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), the sudden global fascination with photonics is less a surprise than a delayed validation. It is a thesis he has spent more than a decade trying to support with funding.
“New technologies can drive industrial upgrading,” Mi said from his Shanghai office, which carries a nameplate “Wallfacer”, after the elite strategists in award-winning sci-fi author Liu Cixin’s The Three-Body Problem trilogy whose minds serve as humanity’s last refuge from alien surveillance. “Our role is to push scientific research towards commercialisation.”
Light matters
Mi, who holds a doctorate in optics from the Xian Institute of Optics and Precision Mechanics under CAS, has been investing in photonics from day one. Today, more than 200 of CAS Star’s roughly 600 portfolio companies span the broader photonics sector, covering sensing, communications, computing, storage and display.
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Optics have been drastically revalued as AI clusters scale to unprecedented sizes. To train huge AI models, tens of thousands of specialised computing chips must constantly share data with one another. Traditionally, this data is transmitted through standard copper cables and wires.
However, these copper interconnects are now hitting a hard physical wall. Shoving large amounts of data through electricity causes signal loss, generates excessive heat and skyrockets power consumption – creating a bottleneck that slows down the chips. This has made lower-loss optical links, which use light instead of electricity, central to modern data-centre design.
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China’s stock investors are aware. Yuanjie Technology, a Shaanxi-based laser-chipmaker that CAS Star invested in around 2019, has seen its shares surge more than elevenfold over the past year, fuelled by surging revenue from data-centre light-source products.

