Ex-situ conditioning of laser facets and passivated devices formed using the same
11411373 · 2022-08-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01S2301/176
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/1082
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01S5/028
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/10
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Edge-emitting laser diodes having mirror facets include passivation coatings that are conditioned using an ex-situ process to condition the insulating material used to form the passivation layer. An external energy source (laser, flash lamp, e-beam) is utilized to irradiate the material at a given dosage and for a period of time sufficient to condition the complete thickness of passivation layer. This ex-situ laser treatment is applied to the layers covering both facets of the laser diode (which may comprise both the passivation layers and the coating layers) to stabilize the entire facet overlay. Importantly, the ex-situ process can be performed while the devices are still in bar form.
Claims
1. An edge-emitting laser diode comprising a semiconductor substrate having a waveguide structure formed thereon for generating light at an operating wavelength; a pair of cleaved facets formed on opposing faces of the waveguide structure; a pair of irradiated passivation layers, each irradiated passivation layer comprising a homogenous material selected from the group consisting of: silicon, germanium, antimony, as well as oxides and nitrides thereof, with each irradiated passivation layer formed to exhibit a predetermined thickness and disposed to cover an associated cleaved facet of the pair of cleaved facets, each irradiated passivation layer exhibiting a homogeneous structure through the predetermined thickness thereof, providing a pair of conditioned, irradiated passivation layers; and a reflective coating layer formed directly over at least one conditioned, irradiated passivation layer of the pair of irradiated passivation layers.
2. The edge-emitting laser diode as defined in claim 1 wherein the reflective coating layer is an irradiated reflective coating layer.
3. The edge-emitting laser diode as defined in claim 1 wherein the reflective coating layer is formed of a material selected from the group consisting of: silicon, germanium, gallium arsenide, silicon oxide, silicon nitride, aluminum oxide, titanium oxide, aluminum nitride and tantalum oxide.
4. The edge-emitting laser diode as defined in claim 1 wherein the waveguide structure comprises a ridge waveguide configuration.
5. The edge-emitting laser diode as defined in claim 1 wherein the waveguide structure comprises a buried heterostructure configuration.
6. A laser diode bar comprising a semiconductor substrate having a waveguide structure formed thereon, the waveguide structure extending across a width sufficient to allow for the laser diode bar structure to be thereafter diced into individual edge-emitting laser diode devices; a pair of cleaved facets formed on opposing faces of the laser diode bar structure; a pair of irradiated passivation layers, each irradiated passivation layer comprising a homogenous material selected from the group consisting of: silicon, germanium, antimony, as well as oxides and nitrides thereof, with each irradiated passivation layer formed to exhibit a predetermined thickness and disposed to cover an associated cleaved facet of the pair of cleaved facets, each irradiated passivation layer exhibiting a homogeneous structure through the predetermined thickness thereof, providing a pair of conditioned, irradiated passivation layers; and a reflective coating layer formed directly over at least one conditioned, irradiated passivation layer of the pair of irradiated passivation layers.
7. The laser diode bar as defined in claim 6 wherein the reflective coating layer is an irradiated reflective coating layer.
8. The laser diode bar as defined in claim 6 wherein the reflective coating layer is formed of a material selected from the group consisting of: silicon, germanium, gallium arsenide, silicon oxide, silicon nitride, aluminum oxide, titanium oxide, aluminum nitride and tantalum oxide.
9. The laser diode bar as defined in claim 6 wherein the waveguide structure comprises a ridge waveguide configuration.
10. The laser diode bar as defined in claim 6 wherein the waveguide structure comprises a buried heterostructure configuration.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) As will be described in detail below, the present invention is directed to the utilization of an ex-situ process to fully condition the passivation layer used as a coating on exposed facets of a laser diode. Ex-situ is used here to emphasize the difference between conditioning as formed in accordance with the principles of the present invention (i.e., conditioning provided by using an external energy source) and the prior art “in-situ” conditioning achieved by operation of the laser diode device itself (typically at a reduced current level for an extended period of time). For the purposes of the present invention, the phrase “fully condition” primarily means to condition the material comprising the passivation layer (e.g., silicon, germanium, antimony) through the complete thickness of the layer. To “fully condition” can also be described for the purposes of the present invention as providing an ex-situ stabilization of the complete facet overlay, including both the passivation layer and a standard coating layer overlying the passivation layer (as well as all interfaces therebetween, such as the passivation film-chip interface).
(6) As will be discussed below, the ex-situ approach of the present invention allows for the conditioning to be performed on a bar of laser diodes (prior to dicing into individual devices) thus significantly improving the efficiency of the process over the prior art product-by-product approach. Additionally, the ex-situ process of the present invention takes only a matter of seconds or minutes to perform, depending on the size/area to be treated, not the hours required by the conventional device-operated conditioning approach.
(7) Turning now to the figures, an exemplary laser diode is schematically illustrated in the plan view of
(8) In the commercial production of these devices, a large number of such bars are simultaneously formed on a single GaAs wafer, with the wafer then cleaved along natural cleavage planes to form a large number of separate bars 10 having the front and rear facets 12, 14, as well as the perpendicularly-arranged sides 16, 18, as shown in
(9) As part of the fabrication process, cleaved facets 12, 14 are subjected to the conventional E2 passivation process. That is, bars 10 are loaded into a reaction chamber and passivation material(s) are deposited to a predetermined thickness to provide a coating over mirror surfaces of facets 12 and 14. The passivation materials need to be insulating (or low conducting), preferably comprising silicon, germanium, or antimony, and may also comprise any oxide or nitride of these materials. The as-deposited materials are shown as passivation layers 22, 24 in
(10) In accordance with one or more embodiments of the present invention, conditioning of passivation layers 22, 24 is provided by an external system 30, as shown in
(11) A spectrometer 42, also shown in
(12) It is to be understood that the same ex-situ radiation process can be used to fully condition passivation layer 24 along the opposite endface of the laser diode. Indeed, it is possible to configure a system where both facets are simultaneously conditioned. It has been found that the conditioning provided by this ex-situ irradiation process results in a homogeneous conditioning of the passivation materials through the complete thickness of the passivation layer. This is a clear advantage over the prior art process of activating the devices and performing the conditioning at a reduced power level, which has been found to result at times in a partial, inhomogeneous conditioning of the passivation materials.
(13) As mentioned above, it is also possible to perform the conditioning process of the present invention after both the passivation layers and reflective coating layers have been applied over the laser facets.
(14) Similar to the embodiment of
(15) Thus, in accordance with this
(16) The COD current of devices formed in accordance with the present invention has been compared against devices using the conventional burn-in process. It is recalled that “COD current” is defined as the current at which the laser facet experiences catastrophic optical damage.
(17) It is observed that the devices formed in accordance with the present invention exhibit a somewhat higher level of COD than those of the prior art. While this is clearly one goal of the present invention, the fact that full conditioning can be performed on the complete laser bar (instead of at the individual device level) is also significant and a great improvement over the prior art. Moreover, the inventive ex-situ condition process is orders of magnitude more efficient than the standard burn-in process, able to fully condition/stabilize the structure in a matter of seconds or minutes, in comparison to the tens to hundreds of hours required for low-current level burn-in.
(18) Summarizing, the process of the present invention has been found to homogeneously and fully condition the standard E2 passivation layer (as well as the overlying coating layer when present), eliminating the vertical and lateral conditioning inhomogeneity as found in the prior art. The inventive process is found to maximize the current level at which mirror damage occurs (i.e., the COD current/optical power) without burn-in. This eliminates the prior art's need to perform chip training by chip operation. The distribution of COD current within a production lot has also been found to be reduced.
(19) Moreover, as mentioned above, it is possible to perform ex-situ full conditioning of laser facets at the bar level (i.e., before chip separation). This allows for the full conditioning of a large number of bars in a short period of time, as preferred for mass production situations. Indeed, the inventive approach also eliminates the need for a customer to perform any conditioning steps on the devices, as was the case in certain situations in the past.
(20) It is to be understood that the principles of the present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects as only illustrative, not restrictive. The scope of the invention, therefore, is indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.