Distributed feedback laser diode
10658816 ยท 2020-05-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Anatole Lupu (Fontainebleau, FR)
- Natalia Dubrovina (Palaiseau, FR)
- Abderrahim Ramdane (Sceaux, FR)
- Henri BENISTY (Palaiseau, FR)
Cpc classification
H01S5/12
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01S5/12
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/065
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The invention relates to a distributed feedback laser diode (10) comprising a waveguide with a gain medium assisted by a network formed by a distribution of elements (22) including a sub-set comprising localised resonators (24) distributed along the axis of the waveguide, characterised in that the frequency characteristic of the feedback induced on the wave of the guide by the spatial distribution of said elements differs by less than 50% of the resonance frequency of said localised resonators.
Claims
1. A distributed feedback laser diode comprising a waveguide with a gain medium assisted by a grating formed by a distribution of elements including a subset comprising localised resonators distributed along an axis of the waveguide, wherein: a characteristic frequency of feedback induced on a wave of the guide by the spatial distribution of the elements differs by less than 50% from a resonance frequency of the localised resonators; and the laser diode is configured such that an optical confinement factor of the wave of the guide with localised resonators is adjusted so as to enable an induced transparency phenomenon.
2. The laser diode of claim 1, wherein the elements are distributed in the form of a periodic grating along a main axis of the waveguide.
3. The laser diode of claim 1, wherein the characteristic frequency of the feedback induced by the grating formed by the distributed elements differs by less than 20% from the resonance frequency of the localised resonators themselves.
4. The laser diode of claim 1, wherein the localised resonators comprise at least one element having a dimension between and 1/20 of the ratio between speed of light (c) and a frequency (f) of laser emission in a direction substantially perpendicular to a main axis of the waveguide.
5. The laser diode of claim 4, wherein the elements forming the resonant localised resonators are arranged such that a greatest dimension is oriented along a direction of one of a non-null electric field of the guided wave.
6. The laser diode of claim 5, wherein the resonant elements of the localised resonators are arranged such that the greatest dimension is oriented along a direction of a dominant electric field of the guided wave.
7. The laser diode of claim 6, wherein the localised resonators are arranged along a direction substantially perpendicular to the main axis of the waveguide with a separation therebetween less than the dimension of the localised resonators along the direction.
8. The laser diode of claim 7, wherein the separation is between 1/10 and 1/50 of c/f.
9. The laser diode of claim 6, wherein a distance between localised resonators closest to the waveguide and the flank of the waveguide is less than or equal to 1/10 of c/f.
10. The laser diode of claim 9, wherein the localised resonators closest to the waveguide are in contact with one of the edges of the guide.
11. The laser diode of claim 6, wherein localised resonators are at least partially inside the waveguide.
12. The laser diode of claim 6, wherein a period of the periodic grating comprises between 1 and 10 localised resonators.
13. The laser diode of claim 1, wherein the localised resonators consist of a meta-material of dielectric, metallic or metallo-dielectric nature.
14. The laser diode of claim 1, wherein a quality factor of the localised resonators is adjusted between 10 and 100 using a dissipative material at a laser emission frequency.
15. The laser diode of claim 14, wherein the dissipative material is a metal.
16. A telecommunication device comprising a laser diode of claim 1 as an optical source.
17. The telecommunication device of claim 16, further defined as not comprising an optical isolator.
Description
(1) The present invention will be understood more clearly in the light of the following description which is merely given by way of indication and which is not intended to restrict said invention, accompanied by the following figures:
(2)
(3)
(4) It should be noted that these drawings have no other aim than to illustrate the text of the description and in no way constitute a restriction of the scope of the invention.
(5) In the different figures, the different elements are not necessarily represented to scale so as to present a view enabling easier comprehension of the invention.
(6)
(7) As illustrated in
(8) Generally, the difference layers are arranged on a semiconductor substrate 12, for example by means of an epitaxy method.
(9) The semiconductor substrate 12 material is defined by the laser diode wavelength range sought, according to epitaxy considerations well-known to those skilled in the art.
(10) The active layer 14 may be prepared as a thin layer, for example of a thickness of approximately 0.2 m. The composition thereof makes it possible to obtain under electrical injection an optical gain around the wavelength sought, of a typical spectral width =(c/f) between 3 and 300 nm.
(11) The active layer 14 arranged on the semiconductor substrate is the layer wherein at least one partial population inversion is possible. The photons which are created by spontaneous emission are emitted particularly in a longitudinal direction, and are amplified by stimulated emission because they are subject to distributed feedback, as well as a possible reflection on the mirrors at the ends of the laser.
(12) For laser diodes having a lateral coupling, the net gain modulation, i.e. the pure amplification due to the stimulated emission reduced by the internal absorption, is conveyed by the selection of a single longitudinal natural mode of the laser cavity due to the frequency at which the combined reflection of the selective absorption minimum of the photons on the periodic surface structure occurs.
(13) While the semiconductor substrate 12 is generally n-doped, the semiconductor layer 18 arranged on the active layer 16 is generally p-doped, so as to provide a pin junction forming a diode, and also a minimisation of ohmic resistances in view of technological constraints.
(14) The thickness and doping quantity of the semiconductor layer 18 and of the semiconductor substrate 12 are generally of comparable orders of magnitude.
(15) As illustrated in
(16) As represented in
(17) The grating 20 is formed by a distribution of elements 22 distributed along the axis of the waveguide.
(18) The confinement factor of the grating is defined as the overlap ratio between the intensity profile of the optical mode propagated in the waveguide and the cross-section in a transverse plane of the elements of the periodic grating.
(19) At least one subset of the elements 22 of the grating 20 comprises localised resonators 24.
(20) The distribution of the elements 22 along the waveguide is such that the characteristic frequency of the feedback induced on the wave of the guide by this distribution differs by less than 50%, for example less than 40%, from the resonance frequency of said localised resonators 24.
(21) According to an embodiment of the invention, the grating and the waveguide are configured such that the characteristic frequency of the feedback induced by the grating formed by the elements 22 differs by less than 30%, for example less than 20% from the resonance frequency of the localised resonators 22 themselves.
(22) As represented in
(23) In the embodiment represented in
(24) The distance between the edges of the localised resonators closest to the waveguide and the flank of the waveguide is typically less than or equal to 1/10 of c/f, where c is the speed of light and f the laser emission frequency. Preferably, the localised resonators closest to the waveguide are in contact with the flank of the edge of the waveguide.
(25) Though not represented in
(26) The localised resonators comprise at least one element having a dimension between and 1/20 of the ratio between the speed of light c and the laser emission frequency f, in a direction substantially perpendicular to the main axis of the waveguide.
(27) As illustrated in
(28) According to an embodiment, the elements forming the resonant localised resonators are arranged such that the greatest dimension is oriented along the direction of one of the non-null electric fields of the guided wave, in particular along the direction of the dominant electric field of the guided wave.
(29) Furthermore, as illustrated in
(30) The localised resonators may consist of a meta-material, for example of dielectric, metallic or metallo-dielectric nature. Advantageously, the resonant properties of the meta-material make it possible to increase by one order of magnitude the Bragg grating feedback strength.
(31) Furthermore, according to an embodiment of the invention, the quality factor of the localised resonators is adjusted between 10 and 100 using a dissipative material at the laser emission frequency, such as a metal. In this case, the feedback frequency and the natural frequency of the resonators must be adjusted accordingly, so that one falls in the spectral width of the other.
(32) According to a preferred embodiment, the grating and the waveguide are configured such that the optical confinement factor of the wave of the guide with localised resonators is adjusted so as to enable an induced transparency phenomenon.
(33) The induced transparency phenomenon corresponds to the destructive interference effect between coupled resonant oscillators results in the appearance of a narrow window of transparency in the middle of an absorption band. This phenomenon represents a conventional analogy of the induced transparency effect observed in atomic physics.
(34) In the case of plasmonic resonators, the destructive interference effect of localised surface plasmons due to the evanescent coupling between resonant plasmonic elements results in the appearance of a narrow window of transparency in the middle of an absorption band.
(35) In particular, it is possible to act upon the proximity and/or index of the localised resonators.
(36) The induced transparency mode has a large number of advantages.
(37) Unlike the usual case of Bragg grating guides, the high density of photonic states promoting the action of the laser is also accompanied by a maximum in transmission.
(38) The low quality factor of plasmonic nano-resonators renders the induced transparency particularly robust with respect to the wave front phase disturbances. It is particularly this property which is targeted to render the laser very tolerant with respect to parasitic feedback in optical communications at 1.5 m.
(39) The single-mode spectral operation of the laser according to the invention is the direct consequence of the high density of states associated with the induced transparency phenomenon.
(40) The operation of the laser in induced transparency mode reduces losses associated with metal absorption substantially and consequently the level of gain as well as the injection current used to attain the laser emission threshold.
(41) As illustrated in
(42) Furthermore, the reduction of the ohmic losses due to operation in induced transparency mode makes it possible to increase by one order of magnitude the confinement factor of the guided mode with the periodic Bragg grating disturbance.
(43) A greater Bragg grating strength makes it possible to reduce the length of the device and move towards greater miniaturisation of laser sources that may find a role in optical fibre communication applications.
(44) The resonant properties of the meta-material are strongly dependent on the optical mode polarisation. The inventors were able to detect a high tolerance, of 15 dB, for the optical feedback in the induced transparency mode. A tolerance of 19 dB is considered to be satisfactory for a number of applications, in particular according to the standard IEEE 802.3.
(45) The invention also relates to a telecommunication device comprising a laser diode according to the invention as an optical source.
(46) Advantageously, the use of a laser diode according to the invention makes it possible to do away with the need for an optical isolator.
(47) A laser diode according to the invention may also be inserted into a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) or in sensors or optical instruments.
(48) The invention was described above using embodiments presented in the figures, without restricting the general inventive concept.
(49) Many other modifications and variations suggest themselves to those skilled in the art, after considering the different embodiments illustrated in this application. These applications are given by way of example and are not intended to restrict the scope of the invention, which is determined exclusively by the claims hereinafter.
(50) In the claims, the term comprising does not exclude other elements or steps, and the use of the indefinite article a does not exclude a plurality. The mere fact that the different features are listed in mutually dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these features cannot be advantageously used. Finally, any reference used in the claims must not be interpreted as a restriction of the scope of the invention.