Oxide Aperture Shaping In Vertical Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser
20200358252 ยท 2020-11-12
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Inventors
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Abstract
A corrected mesa structure for a VCSEL device is particularly configured to compensate for variations in the shape of the created oxide aperture that result from anisotropic oxidation. In particular, a corrected mesa shape is derived by determining the shape of an as-created aperture formed by oxidizing a circular mesa structure, and then ascertaining the compensation required to convert the as-created shape into a desired (target) shaped aperture opening. The compensation value is then used to modify the shape of the mesa itself such that a following anisotropic oxidation yields a target-shaped oxide aperture.
Claims
1. A method of creating an oxide aperture of a predetermined target cross-sectional shape within a mesa structure of a vertical cavity surface emitter laser (VCSEL) device, the method including the steps of: a) defining a target oxide aperture shape r.sub.oxap(); b) performing oxidation of a VCSEL mesa structure having an initial mesa shape r.sub.mesa(); c) determining a shape d.sub.oxap() of an as-fabricated oxide aperture resulting from the oxidation of step b); d) measuring a difference between the target oxide aperture shape r.sub.oxap() and the as-fabricated shape d.sub.oxap() at various radial locations to create a radial deviation function (); and e) adding the deviation function () to the initial mesa shape r.sub.mesa() to define a corrected mesa shape c.sub.mesa(); and f) etching the mesa of the VCSEL to exhibit the corrected mesa shape.
2. The method as defined in claim 1, further comprising the step of: oxidizing the corrected mesa shape structure to form the oxide aperture of the predetermined target cross-sectional shape.
3. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the target oxide aperture is circular in cross-sectional shape.
4. The method as defined in claim 1, wherein in performing step d), if the radial deviation function () is less than a defined threshold value, eliminating the performance of steps e) and f).
5. A method of manufacturing a vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL), the method comprising growing on a substrate layers to form a first distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) and a second DBR, each of the first and second DBRs comprising a stack of layers of alternating refractive index, an active layer disposed between the first DBR and the second DBR, and an aperture layer disposed either between the first and second DBRs or within one of the DBRs, the aperture layer formed of a composition that exhibits anisotropic oxidation; etching the layers to provide a mesa having a corrected shape determined for formation of an oxide aperture of a predetermined target shape; and oxidizing the aperture layer within the mesa so as to produce an outer boundary coincident with the periphery of the corrected mesa shape and an internal boundary defining the predetermined target shape of the oxide aperture.
6. A vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) comprising: a substrate, on which are disposed first and second distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs), each DBR comprising a stack of layers of alternating refractive index and the second DBR exhibiting a corrected mesa structure of a predetermined shape required to create an oxide aperture of a targeted shape; an active layer disposed between the DBRs; and an aperture layer disposed within the mesa structure, wherein the aperture layer is formed of a composition that exhibits anisotropic oxidation, the aperture layer including an outer insulating boundary region coincident with sidewalls of the corrected mesa structure and an inner oxide aperture of a target shape, the target shape defined by anisotropic oxidation of the aperture layer.
7. The VCSEL as defined in claim 6 wherein the aperture layer comprises Al.sub.x(Ga.sub.1-x)As, with an aluminum content x greater than the aluminum content of the remaining layers in the corrected mesa structure.
8. The VCSEL as defined in claim 7 where the aluminum content x of the aperture layer is at least about 0.90.
9. The VCSEL as defined in claim 6 wherein the target shape of the oxide aperture is circular and the predetermined shape of the corrected mesa structure is elliptical.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] Referring now to the drawings, where like numerals represent like parts in several views:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] Vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) consist of a pair of distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) that function as the opposing mirror surfaces of a laser cavity, with the laser's active region and current-confining structure positioned between the pair of DBRs.
[0024] Oxide aperture 24 is substantially optically transparent having a first refractive index resulting in a first optical path length. The remainder of layer 22 surrounding aperture 24, defined as outer insulating boundary 26, has a different, second refractive index and, therefore, a different, second optical path length. Consequently, light transmitted through outer insulating boundary 26 is out of phase with parallel light transmitted through oxide aperture 24. Thus, layer 22 functions as an optical spatial filter, since transverse modes that optically overlap with the layer experience preferentially increased optical losses.
[0025] Following epitaxial growth of the required semiconductor layers upon the substrate, a mesa structure 30 is defined by means of a lithographic process followed by an etching step. A conventional mesa 30 has a generally circular shape, being either generally cylindrical or generally conic. Subsequent to the mesa etch step, an oxidation process is performed to create oxide aperture 24. As mentioned above, aperture layer 22 comprises a semiconductor material having an increased proportion of a selected material (typically, aluminum for a layer of AlGaAs) relative to the remainder of the layers within the mesa, where the higher concentration of the selected material provides a higher oxidation rate of aperture layer 22 with respect to the remainder of the semiconductor layers forming mesa 30. In an exemplary embodiment, an aluminum-rich layer 22 of Al.sub.xGa.sub.1-xAs may exhibit an aluminum content x of 90% or more.
[0026] In particular, aperture layer 22 is oxidized laterally from the edges toward the center of the mesa structure. The other layers in the mesa structure remain essentially unoxidized (or are significantly less oxidized) since they are not formed a priori to have a higher content of a material such as aluminum. The oxidized portions of layer 22 become electrically non-conductive, defining outer insulating boundary 26. As briefly mentioned above, the size and shape of aperture 24 formed within the central region of aperture layer 22 is a function of the oxidation rate of the material forming the layer, which is dependent upon the oxidation chemistry, the aluminum concentration, the time lapse of the oxidation process and other factors. The oxidation may be either isotropic or anisotropic, as described above.
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[0028] The same desired result of a circular oxide aperture is not the case when the oxidation process is anisotropic (i.e., {right arrow over (VX)}{right arrow over (VY)}).
[0029] The techniques of the present invention address this problem by shaping the mesa to compensate for differences attributed to anisotropic oxidation rates.
[0030] In accordance with the principles of the present invention and with reference to
[0031] In more detail, and with reference to
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[0033] A point-by point deviation between the actual and target shapes, shown as shaded regions in
c.sub.mesa()=r.sub.mesa()+().
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[0035] Therefore, in accordance with the principles of the present invention, by etching the VCSEL structure to form a mesa following the mathematical shape defined by c.sub.mesa(), the subsequent anisotropic oxidation of the oxide aperture layer will result in the creation of a circular aperture defined by r.sub.oxap().
[0036] It is to be understood that while the process of the present invention as outlined above is used to form a circular aperture as the target shape, the principles of the present invention can be similarly applied to determine the deviation between an as-fabricated aperture and any desired target shape (e.g., rectangular, multi-sectored, or the like.
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[0038] Continuing with the description of the
[0039] Presuming that the result from the evaluation of step 110 is that the test aperture does not match the target aperture, the conclusion may be reached that the oxidation process experienced by the test structure was an anisotropic oxidation, and the correction process of the present invention is needed to create an oxide aperture of the target shape (shown as step 130). By knowing the specific relation (equation) defining the target shape, the differences between the test (as-fabricated) oxide aperture and target aperture are measured at a set of points around the perimeter of the apertures (i.e., measured in radians). As shown in step 140, this set of measured deviations is fitted (e.g., polynomial) and leads to a correction function Me).
[0040] This correction function is subsequently utilized in step 150 to modify the conventional circular pattern used for the mesa etch step, so as to form a corrected mesa structure that compensates for the specific deviations in the anisotropic oxidation results found in the test structure. In particular, this correction is applied to the mask used in the process of preferentially etching the semiconductor layers to create the mesa structure (shown as step 160) thereafter used in the formation of wafer scale numbers of VCSEL devices.
[0041] While the invention has been described in conjunction with specific embodiments, it is evident to those skilled in the art that many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent in light of the foregoing description. Accordingly, the invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variations that fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.