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

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

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)

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

Review of Semiconductor Physics

Luminous Equivalent of Radiation

Light Sources, Modulation, Transmitters and Receivers

Introduction Fundamentals of laser Types of lasers Semiconductor lasers

LASER Transmitters 1 OBJECTIVE 2 PRE-LAB

Lecture 4 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 4, Slide 1

TECHNICAL BRIEF O K I L A S E R D I O D E P R O D U C T S. OKI Laser Diodes

FIBER OPTICS. Prof. R.K. Shevgaonkar. Department of Electrical Engineering. Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. Lecture: 18.

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

15 Transit Time and Tunnel NDR Devices

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

Optoelectronics ELEC-E3210

Ph 77 ADVANCED PHYSICS LABORATORY ATOMIC AND OPTICAL PHYSICS

MAHALAKSHMI ENGINEERING COLLEGE TIRUCHIRAPALLI

Physics of Waveguide Photodetectors with Integrated Amplification

Chapter 3 OPTICAL SOURCES AND DETECTORS

Lasers PH 645/ OSE 645/ EE 613 Summer 2010 Section 1: T/Th 2:45-4:45 PM Engineering Building 240

Absorption: in an OF, the loss of Optical power, resulting from conversion of that power into heat.

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

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

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

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

Doppler-Free Spetroscopy of Rubidium

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

LASER DIODE MODULATION AND NOISE

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

UNIT What is splicing? Explain about fusion splicing? Ans: Splicing

RECENTLY, studies have begun that are designed to meet

Optical Sources and Detectors

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

Copyright 2006 Crosslight Software Inc. Analysis of Resonant-Cavity Light-Emitting Diodes

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

1 Semiconductor-Photon Interaction

CHAPTER 8 The PN Junction Diode

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

PN Junction in equilibrium

Fundamentals of Laser

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

CHAPTER 8 The PN Junction Diode

Simulation of a DBR Edge Emitting Laser with External Air Gap Tuning Mirror

Chapter 4 O t p ica c l a So S u o r u ce c s

Nanophotonics: Single-nanowire electrically driven lasers

Fiberoptic Communication Systems By Dr. M H Zaidi. Optical Amplifiers

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

Modulation of light. Direct modulation of sources Electro-absorption (EA) modulators

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

Photonics and Fiber Optics

Understanding Optical Communications

CHAPTER 8 The pn Junction Diode

Implant Confined 1850nm VCSELs

Semiconductor Devices

DIODE LASER SPECTROSCOPY (160309)

Copyright by Nicole Helbig 1999

ECE 4606 Undergraduate Optics Lab Interface circuitry. Interface circuitry. Outline

Notes on Optical Amplifiers

Application Instruction 002. Superluminescent Light Emitting Diodes: Device Fundamentals and Reliability

Optical Gain Experiment Manual

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

GROUP III-ARSENIDE-NITRIDE LONG WAVELENGTH LASER DIODES

Single-photon excitation of morphology dependent resonance

Longitudinal Multimode Dynamics in Monolithically Integrated Master Oscillator Power Amplifiers

LEDs, Photodetectors and Solar Cells

Section 2.3 Bipolar junction transistors - BJTs

Prepared by: Dr. Rishi Prakash, Dept of Electronics and Communication Engineering Page 1 of 5

LAB V. LIGHT EMITTING DIODES

Lecture 18: Photodetectors

Functional Materials. Optoelectronic devices

NEW YORK CITY COLLEGE of TECHNOLOGY

Monolithic coupled-cavity laser diodes for bio-sensing applications

Monolithically Integrated Broadly Tunable Light Emitters Based On Selectively Intermixed Quantum Wells

Elements of Optical Networking

Novel Integrable Semiconductor Laser Diodes

Sandia National Laboratories MS 1153, PO 5800, Albuquerque, NM Phone: , Fax: ,

VERTICAL CAVITY SURFACE EMITTING LASER

Fabrication and characterization of broadband superluminescent diodes for 2µm wavelength

Degradation analysis in asymmetric sampled grating distributed feedback laser diodes

S Optical Networks Course Lecture 2: Essential Building Blocks

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

LAB V. LIGHT EMITTING DIODES

AIR FORCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

Advanced Optical Communications Prof. R. K. Shevgaonkar Department of Electrical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay

HIGH-EFFICIENCY MQW ELECTROABSORPTION MODULATORS

LEP Optical pumping

Lecture 9 External Modulators and Detectors

Investigation of InGaAsP/InP DFB and FP Laser Diodes Noise Characteristic

Ba 14: Solid State Laser Principles I

Introduction to Optoelectronic Devices

Chapter 1 Introduction

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

RECENTLY, using near-field scanning optical

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

1 INTRODUCTION 3 2 BASICS 4 3 EXPERIMENTS 12

Objective Type Questions 1. Why pure semiconductors are insulators at 0 o K? 2. What is effect of temperature on barrier voltage? 3.

Lecture 4 INTEGRATED PHOTONICS

Chapter 8. Wavelength-Division Multiplexing (WDM) Part II: Amplifiers

Transcription:

Figure 1. Schematic diagram of a Fabry-Perot laser. Figure 1. Shows the structure of a typical edge-emitting laser. The dimensions of the active region are 200 m m in length, 2-10 m m lateral width and 0.1 m m in transverse dimension. In reality there are many different designs of edge-emitting lasers. Current flows from the p to the type semiconductor with electrons and holes being injected in the active region. A further advantage of the double heterostructure is that the large bandgap semiconductor has a lower refractive index than that in the active region giving index guiding in the transverse direction. In the plain of the active region the emission is confined by gain guiding, where the refractive index is modified by the carrier density. The formation of a stripe contact separated by a semi-insulating regions of proton bombarded semiconductor allows

the current to flow through a restricted portion of the active region. This also aid the optical confinement in the plane of the active region. We have seen in the last section that p-n junctions can be used to create a laser. The current required to achieve lasing is enormous. This is because there is in defined region for radiative recombination to occur. Electrons and hole can just drift through the junction without recombining. A more efficient solution is to use heterostructures and double heterostructures. A heterostructure, as the name suggests uses to different types of semiconductor with one with a larger bandgap than the other. When the two semiconductors are brought together potential barriers are formed which can confine the electrons and holes. The situation is further improved in the double heterostructure.

Figure 2. Bandedge diagram of a NpP AlGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. Figure 2. a) shows a NpP double heterostructure, (the capital letters represent the larger bandgap semiconductors). In this case for AlGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs in equilibrium. The Fermi level is constant across the junction and causes the band profile to bend as shown.

In Figure 2. b), the double heterostructure has been forward biased causing an injection of electrons and holes into the device, the depletion region is reduced and the bands of the N-type AlGaAs shift upwards. When the voltage is sufficient, the quasi-fermi level for the N-type material is at the same energy and the electrons can overcome the potential barrier D E c and flow into the p-gaas region where they are confined by the lower bandgap material. Similarly, holes flow in from the P-type AlGaAs to the p-gaas valence band. The electrons and holes are confined where they can combine radiatively. Population inversion is not enough to create a laser. In order for stimulated emission to become significant, the light must interact with the electrons in the conduction band. This is achieved by creating a resonant cavity in which the light is reflected back and forth many times before leaving the cavity. If the gain equals loss, lasing will occur. We can analyses qualitatively analyse the loss processes and calculate the minimum gain as well as the resonant cavity conditions. The design of the cavity structures for modern heterostructure lasers can be much more complicated incorporating more than one set of cladding layers to confine the carriers (Separate Confinement Heterostructure SCH) or GRaded-INdex Separate Confinement Heterostructures (GRINSCH). Quantum well and Multiple Quantum Well (MQW) active regions have superseded bulk active-regions because of the advantages that they offer. A quantum well is formed when the width of the active region of the laser becomes comparable with the De-Broglie wavelength, (approx. 100 Å). In this situation, the electron states are no longer quasi-continuous but become separated until only a few states lie within the well. The width of the well determines the number and separation of the energy levels within the well, thus the allowed energy transitions. Radiative recombination in the quantum well is predominantly from the first energy level in the conduction band to the first energy level in the heavy-hole valence band. Therefore, the separation of the energy levels can be tailored by careful design of the well width. Another advantage of quantum well lasers is that the temperature dependence of the intrinsic threshold current (i.e. only including properties that are intrinsic to the gain medium.) is linear with temperature. [] Well designed quantum well lasers have low threshold currents and are very reliable with estimated lifetimes of greater than 10 6 hours.

Figure 3. Wave propagation through the semiconductor cavity. An incident wave of amplitude is partially transmitted with ratio t 1 and the right hand facet of the cavity the amplitude has attenuated exponentially and this amplitude is transmitted with ratio t 2. Subsequent reflections from the ends of the cavity are summed at the right hand facet from which the threshold conditions can be calculated. Consider a semiconductor laser cavity of length L with a plane wave with complex propagation constant and amplitude E incident on the left hand side of the cavity. The ratio of transmitted to incident light is t 1 and the ratio of transmitted to incident fields at the left is taken as t 2. The ratio of reflected to incident fields with the optical cavity is r 1 exp( i q 1 ) at the left-hand mirror and r 2 exp( i q 2 ) at the right-hand mirror. For a low loss medium, the phase shifts q 1 and q 2 are small and are generally neglected. Without time dependence, the plane wave electric field is such that E x is t i E i at the first transmition boundary t 1 E i exp( - K L ) just inside the right boundary. The first portion of the field transmitted at the right boundary is t 1 t 2 E i exp( - K L ). The next portion of the wave transmitted is at the right boundary becomes t 1 t 2 r 1 r 2 E i exp( -3 K L ) and so on. Addition of these transmitted fields gives: The sum is a geometric progression which permits the last equation to be written as When the denominator of the last equation tends to zero, the condition of a finite transmitted wave E t with zero E i is obtained, which is the condition for oscillation. Therefore the oscillation condition is reached when The substituting the term for K defined above and remembering that k 0 =2 p / l 0 and also k = a l 0 /4 p into the resonance condition we obtain:

The absorption term has been written as the difference between the gain and the losses a i. The condition for oscillation represents a wave making a round trip of 2L inside the cavity to the starting plane with the same amplitude and phase, within a multiple of 2 p. The amplitude condition is: This more usually written, where R = R 1 = r 1 r * 1 = R 2 = r 2 r * 2 is the power reflectivity. For cleaved semiconductor facets in GaAs R~0.3. An additional factor which is often included is the optical confinement factor G which measures the ratio of the emission mode within the active region. For bulk edge emitting lasers this is close to unity but for quantum well lasers it is considerably smaller (about 0.1). The phase condition becomes: which reduces to A resonance occurs when an integer number of half-wavelength l 0 will fit into the cavity. Figure 4. Schematic laser cavity showing the first three modes.

For example in a GaAs cavity of 200 m m in length there will be around 1600 modes. The longitudinal mode separation is given by differentiating For adjacent modes, q=-1 and the substituting equation (1). (2) To a first approximation, d n /d l is small therefore (3) with L>> l the mode spacing is rather small and many modes will fit into the cavity of the laser. The diagram shows the emission spectra of an edge emitting laser just below threshold. The closely space modes are superimposed on the spontaneous emission profile. As the current is increased to just above threshold one lasing mode becomes dominant. (4)

Figure 5. Emission spectra of an edge-emitting laser below threshold and above. Since the spontaneous emission spectrum is rather broad, several modes compete to become the dominant lasing mode and this mode can switch or mode hop while operating. This characteristic is most undesirable in lasers for

telecommunications.