Semiconductor Lasers Semiconductors were originally pumped by lasers or e-beams First diode types developed in 1962: Create a pn junction in

Similar documents
Semiconductor Lasers Semiconductors were originally pumped by lasers or e-beams First diode types developed in 1962: Create a pn junction in

Review of Semiconductor Physics

Functional Materials. Optoelectronic devices

Optodevice Data Book ODE I. Rev.9 Mar Opnext Japan, Inc.

ECE 340 Lecture 29 : LEDs and Lasers Class Outline:

Key Questions. What is an LED and how does it work? How does a laser work? How does a semiconductor laser work? ECE 340 Lecture 29 : LEDs and Lasers

Luminous Equivalent of Radiation

Lecture 6 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 6, Slide 1

Basic concepts. Optical Sources (b) Optical Sources (a) Requirements for light sources (b) Requirements for light sources (a)

LEDs, Photodetectors and Solar Cells

LAB V. LIGHT EMITTING DIODES

PHYSICAL ELECTRONICS(ECE3540) APPLICATIONS OF PHYSICAL ELECTRONICS PART I

Optoelectronics ELEC-E3210

Introduction Fundamentals of laser Types of lasers Semiconductor lasers

Physics of Waveguide Photodetectors with Integrated Amplification

LAB V. LIGHT EMITTING DIODES

Semiconductor Optical Communication Components and Devices Lecture 18: Introduction to Diode Lasers - I

Light Sources, Modulation, Transmitters and Receivers

Ph 77 ADVANCED PHYSICS LABORATORY ATOMIC AND OPTICAL PHYSICS

Figure 1. Schematic diagram of a Fabry-Perot laser.

MAHALAKSHMI ENGINEERING COLLEGE TIRUCHIRAPALLI

UNIT-III SOURCES AND DETECTORS. According to the shape of the band gap as a function of the momentum, semiconductors are classified as

Lecture 18: Photodetectors

VERTICAL CAVITY SURFACE EMITTING LASER

Diodes Rectifiers, Zener diodes light emitting diodes, laser diodes photodiodes, optocouplers

OPTI510R: Photonics. Khanh Kieu College of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona Meinel building R.626

Review Energy Bands Carrier Density & Mobility Carrier Transport Generation and Recombination

Photonics and Fiber Optics

Chapter 3 OPTICAL SOURCES AND DETECTORS

Design of InGaAs/InP 1.55μm vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSEL)

Optical MEMS in Compound Semiconductors Advanced Engineering Materials, Cal Poly, SLO November 16, 2007

RECENTLY, using near-field scanning optical

Optoelectronics EE/OPE 451, OPT 444 Fall 2009 Section 1: T/Th 9:30-10:55 PM

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

Lecture 4 INTEGRATED PHOTONICS

Fundamentals of Laser

Vertical External Cavity Surface Emitting Laser

Laser Diode. Photonic Network By Dr. M H Zaidi

Quantum-Well Semiconductor Saturable Absorber Mirror

Chapter 1. Introduction

Surface-Emitting Single-Mode Quantum Cascade Lasers

Electronics The basics of semiconductor physics

Optical Sources and Detectors

Introduction to Optoelectronic Devices

64 Channel Flip-Chip Mounted Selectively Oxidized GaAs VCSEL Array

Modal and Thermal Characteristics of 670nm VCSELs

White Paper Laser Sources For Optical Transceivers. Giacomo Losio ProLabs Head of Technology

R. J. Jones Optical Sciences OPTI 511L Fall 2017

LEP Optical pumping

Problem 4 Consider a GaAs p-n + junction LED with the following parameters at 300 K: Electron diusion coecient, D n = 25 cm 2 =s Hole diusion coecient

Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 11 Detectors

SECOND HARMONIC GENERATION AND Q-SWITCHING

10/14/2009. Semiconductor basics pn junction Solar cell operation Design of silicon solar cell

Examination Optoelectronic Communication Technology. April 11, Name: Student ID number: OCT1 1: OCT 2: OCT 3: OCT 4: Total: Grade:

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Nd: YAG Laser Energy Levels 4 level laser Optical transitions from Ground to many upper levels Strong absorber in the yellow range None radiative to

Lecture 9 External Modulators and Detectors


1- Light Emitting Diode (LED)

Degradation analysis in asymmetric sampled grating distributed feedback laser diodes

Safa O. Kasap Electrical Engineering Department, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, S7N 5A9, Canada

Downloaded from

MSE 410/ECE 340: Electrical Properties of Materials Fall 2016 Micron School of Materials Science and Engineering Boise State University

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

ULTRALOW BEAM DIVERGENCE AND INCREASED LATERAL BRIGHTNESS IN OPTICALLY PUMPED MIDINFRARED LASER (POSTPRINT)

GaAs polytype quantum dots

Lecture 4 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 4, Slide 1

1 Semiconductor-Photon Interaction

Index. BaF 2 crystal 41 biochemical sensor 7, 316, ,

Università degli Studi di Roma Tor Vergata Dipartimento di Ingegneria Elettronica. Analogue Electronics. Paolo Colantonio A.A.

What is the highest efficiency Solar Cell?

Robert G. Hunsperger. Integrated Optics. Theory and Technology. Sixth Edition. 4ü Spri rineer g<

CONTENTS. 2.2 Schrodinger's Wave Equation 31. PART I Semiconductor Material Properties. 2.3 Applications of Schrodinger's Wave Equation 34

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Cornell University. ECE 5330: Semiconductor Optoelectronics. Fall 2014

Lecture 14: Photodiodes

Doppler-Free Spetroscopy of Rubidium

Light Emitting Diode IV Characterization

LED lecture. Wei Chih Wang University of Washington

Electronic devices-i. Difference between conductors, insulators and semiconductors

Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser Technology

1 INTRODUCTION 3 2 BASICS 4 3 EXPERIMENTS 12

Optical Sources & Detectors for Fiber Optic communication

An Introduction to Laser Diodes

Midterm #1 Prep. Revision: 2018/01/20. Professor M. Csele, Niagara College

Microelectronic Devices and Circuits Lecture 8 - BJTs Wrap-up, Solar Cells, LEDs - Outline

EQE Measurements in Mid-Infrared Superlattice Structures

Cavity QED with quantum dots in semiconductor microcavities

Fabrication and Characterization of Broad-Area Lasers with Dry-Etched Mirrors

Sub 300 nm Wavelength III-Nitride Tunnel-Injected Ultraviolet LEDs

Semiconductor Optoelectronics Prof. M. R. Shenoy Department of Physics Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi

Optical Amplifiers. Continued. Photonic Network By Dr. M H Zaidi

Large spontaneous emission rate enhancement in a III-V antenna-led

High Average Power, High Repetition Rate Side-Pumped Nd:YVO 4 Slab Laser

IST IP NOBEL "Next generation Optical network for Broadband European Leadership"

A Narrow-Band Tunable Diode Laser System with Grating Feedback

High power VCSEL array pumped Q-switched Nd:YAG lasers

Improved Output Performance of High-Power VCSELs

is a method of transmitting information from one place to another by sending light through an optical fiber. The light forms an electromagnetic

Applications of Steady-state Multichannel Spectroscopy in the Visible and NIR Spectral Region

Advanced semiconductor lasers

Transcription:

Semiconductor Lasers Semiconductors were originally pumped by lasers or e-beams First diode types developed in 1962: Create a pn junction in semiconductor material Pumped now with high current density Modified form of Light Emitting Diodes by creating cavity Ends of material cleaved into mirrors Currently the most common laser 48% of market sales Driven by small size, high efficiently, low cost (<$1)

Semiconductor Materials for Lasers Must use Direct Bandgap Materials: eg III-V or II-VI compounds (refers to column in periodic table) Most common are GaAs, AlAs, InP, InAs combinations Si is an indirect bandgap material (except spongy Si) Indirect materials must emit an acoustic package (phonon) during transition Very inefficient thus Si cannot emit light in normal crystals Direct band: highly efficient emitters of light GaAs is a direct Bandbap Conversion efficiency ~3x greater

Lasers and Light Emitting Diodes Operates like PN junction diode Abrupt junction of P doped and N doped regions Homojunction: materials the same Hetrojunction: P and N materials different Need direct bandgap materials When reversed biased no light When forward biased by high current Conduction electrons directly over valance holes Hole falls into electron: creates light hc E hv and E g h = 4.13 x 10-15 ev hc = 1.24 m ev

Materials And LED's Different Colours of LED's require different bandgaps Most important are combinations of III-V's or II-VI's Especially GaAs-GaP combinations Current behaviour of LED is I D I D I nonradiative I radiative VDq VDq Is exp 1 I RG exp 1 KT 2KT where I s = reverse saturation current I RG = Recombination/Generation current To maximize current must get low currents dominated by nonradiative recombination Medium by radiative diffusion current High by contact resistances

Quaternary and Pentenary Alloy systems Can mix both III and V compounds or higher Gives much more freedom in Bandgap & Lattice Common Examples Ga x In 1-x As y P 1-y Al x Ga 1-x As y Sb 1-y Extreme example uses I-III-VI compounds Cu x Ag 1-x InS 2y Se 2(1-y)

Mixed Alloys Gives a wide range of wavelengths available Can get visible to far infrared

Materials Development Key to LED s Key to making any LED/Laser diode is growing the material Must grow good crystals on the right substrate Material must not be damaged by the high current First LED, Biard and Pittman GaAs in 1961, IR at 900 nm Red LED by Holonyak, Jr. in 1962 using GaAsP Yellow LED by Craford increased efficiency by 10X Green LEDs were weak but by 2000 s became strong AlGaInP Blue LED s were first done in 1972 with GaN but very weak 1992 Nakamura created InGaN high power Blue LED s Akasaki, Amano developed low cost InGaN/GaN structures 2014 Nobel Physics prize to Nakamura, Akasaki, Amano Blue LED are coated with a phosphor: Cesium doped YAG Shifts the Blue light to yellow creating White LED s Super Bright LEDs now target for replace fluorescent lights

Optical Light Confinement When first tired could only lase when cooled below 77 o K Key to operation: LED's and Laser Diodes use light confinement When have high index surrounding low index get beam confined by Total Internal Reflection Called Optical confinement or Waveguide Recall Total Internal Reflection formula sin( c ) Use thin layers of different materials or different doping level both change index of refraction n n

Light Emitting Diode Structure LED's Consist of GaAsP mixed alloy structures Different materials: different index of refraction Use either back absorption or back reflection

PN Junction Diode Laser At low pumping get LED With right cavity shape get laser

Simple Homojunction Diode Laser Homojunction: materials the same on both sides of the Junction Some confinement: small index of refraction difference for n & p Abrupt junction of P doped and N doped regions Emission confined to junction area Mirrors created by cleaving rods Uses crystal planes to create smooth mirrors (change in n mirrors) Highly Elliptical emission: 1x50 microns Problem: light not vertically confined= 30 o x <1 o beam Hence requires very high threshold current & device cooling Often only operates as laser at Liquid Nitrogen temp (77 o K) Homojunction where first type of laser diodes Hetrojunction better: P and N materials different

Heterojunctions Laser Heterojunction diode: different materials for n & p Different materials: significantly different index n Also different lattice constants Important point: want the lattice matched at layer boundary Use mixed alloy: eg GaAs and AlAs Al x Ga 1-1 As x = mole fraction of Aluminum 1-x = mole fraction of Gallium

Heterojunctions Laser Single Heterojunctions: one sided confinement p-gaalas: p-gaas: n-gaas Better confinement means lower threshold current for lasing Thus operates in pulsed mode at room temperature Double Heterojunction lasers: confines both top & bottom p-gaalas: GaAs: n-gaalas: n-gaas

Double Heterojunctions Laser Has both Band and Index steps on both top & bottom Doubly confines light: creates a waveguide as cavity Requires much less threshold current Thus CW operation now possible at room temperature

Comparison of Homo/Hetero/D-Heterojunctions Lasers As add index steps get smaller light spreading Single hetrojunction threshold current ~5x < homojunction Double hetrojunction threshold ~50-100x <homojunction Less current, less heating, more output before thermal limitations

Heterojunctions with Waveguides Buried heterojunction: Surrounded both vertical & horizontal by lower material 1-2 microns wide: high efficiency, low threshold Channeled Substrate Etch channel in substrate: isolate active area Low loss Buried Crescent Fill grove to get crescent shaped active strip

Heterojunctions with Waveguides Ridge Waveguide Etch away a mesa around active region confines current flow to 2-3 micron strip Double-channel planar buried heterostructure Isolate active with mesa, then fill with lower index used with very high power InGaAsP lasers

Quantum Well Materials Make layers about 20 nm thick Then no longer bulk materials Get quantum effects which change bandstructure Transistions still limit by the allowed momentium vectors (k) Now this is called Nanotechonology

Quantum Well Lasers Use different layers to confine light vertically Confine the carriers with quantum layers Can use graded index of refraction materials Create GRINSCH laser with separate optical and carrier confinement Very low threshold (3 ma), high speed lasers

Monolithic Array Lasers Single strip lasers limited to 200 mw Many Laser strips edge emitters Bars with up to 200 strips produced 50 1000 W power achieved 20: 10 micron wide strips on 200 micron centers

Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers VCSEL s (Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers) Cavity built with doping: multilayer mirrors Quantum well emission layer: nearly in size Created 2 million lasers per sq. cm this way

Diode Laser Power & Control Laser diodes are easily damaged As laser output increases, temperature rises, increases resistance Get thermal runaway Can permanently damage diode cleaved mirrors High power diodes have photodiode in same package Diode sees part of laser output, use feedback circuit to stabilize High power diodes are mounted in thermal electric cooler Have supply that does feedback on laser output Also stabilizes diode temperature with thermal cooler

Correction Diode Optics Laser diodes have poor output must correct with optics Have fast axis (rapid expansion) usually vertical Correct with high power lens Slow axis needs less correction, separate lens for that However multi-strip laser diodes cannot use single lens Use a microlens array for each strip Collimates that axis Use cylindrical lens arrays/lens to get both corrected Often spherical for fast axis, cylinder lens for slow

Lead Salt Lasers Use II-VI compounds eg PbTe Mostly long wavelength IR lasers 3.3-29 microns