Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes

abstract: Dual-wavelength laser sources have various existing and potential applications in wavelength division multiplexing, differential techniques in spectroscopy for chemical sensing, multiple-wavelength interferometry, terahertz-wave generation, microelectromechanical systems, and microfluidic...

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Other Authors: Green, Benjamin C. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14387
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-14387
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-143872018-06-22T03:02:21Z Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes abstract: Dual-wavelength laser sources have various existing and potential applications in wavelength division multiplexing, differential techniques in spectroscopy for chemical sensing, multiple-wavelength interferometry, terahertz-wave generation, microelectromechanical systems, and microfluidic lab-on-chip systems. In the drive for ever smaller and increasingly mobile electronic devices, dual-wavelength coherent light output from a single semiconductor laser diode would enable further advances and deployment of these technologies. The output of conventional laser diodes is however limited to a single wavelength band with a few subsequent lasing modes depending on the device design. This thesis investigates a novel semiconductor laser device design with a single cavity waveguide capable of dual-wavelength laser output with large spectral separation. The novel dual-wavelength semiconductor laser diode uses two shorter- and longer-wavelength active regions that have separate electron and hole quasi-Fermi energy levels and carrier distributions. The shorter-wavelength active region is based on electrical injection as in conventional laser diodes, and the longer-wavelength active region is then pumped optically by the internal optical field of the shorter-wavelength laser mode, resulting in stable dual-wavelength laser emission at two different wavelengths quite far apart. Different designs of the device are studied using a theoretical model developed in this work to describe the internal optical pumping scheme. The carrier transport and separation of the quasi-Fermi distributions are then modeled using a software package that solves Poisson's equation and the continuity equations to simulate semiconductor devices. Three different designs are grown using molecular beam epitaxy, and broad-area-contact laser diodes are processed using conventional methods. The modeling and experimental results of the first generation design indicate that the optical confinement factor of the longer-wavelength active region is a critical element in realizing dual-wavelength laser output. The modeling predicts lower laser thresholds for the second and third generation designs; however, the experimental results of the second and third generation devices confirm challenges related to the epitaxial growth of the structures in eventually demonstrating dual-wavelength laser output. Dissertation/Thesis Green, Benjamin C. (Author) Zhang, Yong-Hang (Advisor) Ning, Cun-Zheng (Committee member) Tao, Nongjian (Committee member) Roedel, Ronald J (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Electrical engineering Optics Quantum physics diode dual-wavelength epitaxy laser multi-wavelength semiconductor eng 182 pages Ph.D. Electrical Engineering 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14387 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
Optics
Quantum physics
diode
dual-wavelength
epitaxy
laser
multi-wavelength
semiconductor
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
Optics
Quantum physics
diode
dual-wavelength
epitaxy
laser
multi-wavelength
semiconductor
Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes
description abstract: Dual-wavelength laser sources have various existing and potential applications in wavelength division multiplexing, differential techniques in spectroscopy for chemical sensing, multiple-wavelength interferometry, terahertz-wave generation, microelectromechanical systems, and microfluidic lab-on-chip systems. In the drive for ever smaller and increasingly mobile electronic devices, dual-wavelength coherent light output from a single semiconductor laser diode would enable further advances and deployment of these technologies. The output of conventional laser diodes is however limited to a single wavelength band with a few subsequent lasing modes depending on the device design. This thesis investigates a novel semiconductor laser device design with a single cavity waveguide capable of dual-wavelength laser output with large spectral separation. The novel dual-wavelength semiconductor laser diode uses two shorter- and longer-wavelength active regions that have separate electron and hole quasi-Fermi energy levels and carrier distributions. The shorter-wavelength active region is based on electrical injection as in conventional laser diodes, and the longer-wavelength active region is then pumped optically by the internal optical field of the shorter-wavelength laser mode, resulting in stable dual-wavelength laser emission at two different wavelengths quite far apart. Different designs of the device are studied using a theoretical model developed in this work to describe the internal optical pumping scheme. The carrier transport and separation of the quasi-Fermi distributions are then modeled using a software package that solves Poisson's equation and the continuity equations to simulate semiconductor devices. Three different designs are grown using molecular beam epitaxy, and broad-area-contact laser diodes are processed using conventional methods. The modeling and experimental results of the first generation design indicate that the optical confinement factor of the longer-wavelength active region is a critical element in realizing dual-wavelength laser output. The modeling predicts lower laser thresholds for the second and third generation designs; however, the experimental results of the second and third generation devices confirm challenges related to the epitaxial growth of the structures in eventually demonstrating dual-wavelength laser output. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Electrical Engineering 2011
author2 Green, Benjamin C. (Author)
author_facet Green, Benjamin C. (Author)
title Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes
title_short Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes
title_full Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes
title_fullStr Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes
title_full_unstemmed Dual-Wavelength Internal-Optically-Pumped Semiconductor Laser Diodes
title_sort dual-wavelength internal-optically-pumped semiconductor laser diodes
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14387
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