Vertical-cavity Surface-emitting Lasers: Oxide-apertured Cavities and Novel Active Regions

Author(s):  
D.G. Deppe
Author(s):  
С.С. Рочас ◽  
И.И. Новиков ◽  
А.Г. Гладышев ◽  
Е.С. Колодезный ◽  
А.В. Бабичев ◽  
...  

The results of the study of heterostructures based on short-period InGaAs/InGaAlAs superlattices fabricated by molecular beam epitaxy on an InP substrate with the aim of using them as active regions for vertical-cavity surface emitting lasers of the 1.3 μm spectral range are studied. Photoluminescence and X-ray diffraction studies of the fabricated heterostructures are carried out. It was shown that a change in the ratio of the quantum well thickness and the barrier layer thickness of the superlattice allows one to controllably shift the position of the photoluminescence peak and to provide the heterostructure parameters necessary to achieve lasing at a wavelength of 1.3 μm, while the photoluminescence efficiency remains practically unchanged.


1996 ◽  
Vol 421 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.I. Babic ◽  
V. Jayaraman ◽  
N. M. Margalit ◽  
K. Streubel ◽  
M.E. Heimbuch ◽  
...  

AbstractLong-wavelength (1300/1550 nm) vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) have been much more difficult to realize than VCSELs at shorter wavelengths such as 850/980 nm. The primary reason for this has been the low refractive index difference and reflectivity associated with lattice-matched InP/InGaAsP mirrors. A solution to this problem is to “wafer-fuse” high-reflectivity GaAs/AlGaAs mirrors to InP/InGaAsP active regions. This process has led to the first room-temperature continuous-wave (CW) 1.54 μm VCSELs. In this paper, we discuss two device geometries which employ wafer-fused mirrors, both of which lead to CW operation. We also discuss fabrication of WDM arrays using long-wavelength VCSELs.


Author(s):  
Pawe ,Ma kowiak ◽  
W ,odzimierz Nakwaski

A detailed threshold analysis of room-temperature pulsed operation of GaN/AlGaN/AlN vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) is carried out. The model takes advantage of the latest results concerning gain in active regions, material absorption in the cladding layers, as well as cavity diffraction and scattering losses. The simulation showed that although VCSELs with single (S) or multiple (M) quantum-well (QW) active regions exhibit lower threshold currents, they are much more sensitive to any increase in optical losses than their bulk counterparts. In particular, decreasing the active region radius of gain-guided QW VCSELs below 5 μm (which increases diffraction losses) or increasing dislocation densities (which, in turn, raises scattering losses) gives an enormous rise to their threshold currents. Therefore small-size GaN VCSELs should have an index-guided structure. In the case of MQW VCSELs, the optimal number of quantum wells strongly depends on the reflectivities of resonator mirrors. According to our study, MQW GaN lasers usually require noticeably lower threshold currents compared to SQW lasers. The optimal number of QW active layers is lower in laser structures exhibiting lower optical losses. Although the best result occurred for an active region thickness of 4 nm, threshold currents for the various sizes differ insignificantly.


2002 ◽  
Vol 412 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 107-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Regiński ◽  
T Ochalski ◽  
J Muszalski ◽  
M Bugajski ◽  
J.P Bergman ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document