SPECKLE REDUCED BROADBAND VISIBLE QUANTUM DOT LASERS
20180337514 ยท 2018-11-22
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01S5/34333
ELECTRICITY
H01S2301/203
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/183
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/3211
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/18308
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/2231
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01S5/34
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/30
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/183
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/343
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/20
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A semiconductor visible laser with broadband emission and reduced speckling is provided. Conventional lasers with narrow spectral emission cause undesired speckles. The invention reduces laser speckles by producing a broadband laser emission. The laser comprises a multitude of quantum dot layers having quantum dots that have inhomogeneity in size, density, or composition. Methods of constructing such a laser are also provided.
Claims
1. A semiconductor laser, comprising: a substrate; an optional buffer layer on the substrate; and an active optical gain medium on the buffer layer if present, or on the substrate if the buffer layer is not present, the active optical gain medium comprising: a plurality of quantum dot layer pairs, each pair comprising a quantum dot layer and a barrier layer, the quantum dot layer having quantum dots exhibiting at least one of compositional inhomogeneity, size inhomogeneity, and density variation and enabling the emission of laser light with a spectral bandwidth of at least 2 nm.
2. The semiconductor laser of claim 1 wherein the quantum dots of each quantum dot layer exhibit compositional inhomogeneity, size inhomogeneity, and density variation
3. The semiconductor laser of claim 1 wherein the laser emits laser light from its edge and is optically pumped with at least one light source having a shorter wavelength than the emitted laser light, the semiconductor laser further comprising: a top waveguide layer above the active optical gain medium and a bottom waveguide layer below the active optical gain medium; and a top cladding layer and a bottom cladding layer for the top waveguide layer and bottom waveguide layer respectively, each cladding layer being on the side of the respective waveguide layer opposite that of the side adjoining the active optical gain medium, the cladding layers having a lower refractive index than that of the waveguide layers.
4. The semiconductor laser of claim 3 further comprising: a first mirror coating with a reflectance of between 30% and 100% on one edge of the semiconductor laser; and a second mirror coating with partial transmissivity on an opposite edge of the semiconductor laser.
5. The semiconductor laser of claim 1 wherein the laser is optically pumped and has surface emitting light, the semiconductor laser further comprising: a top cavity layer above the active optical gain medium and a bottom cavity layer below the active optical gain medium; a first mirror coating between the buffer layer and the bottom cavity layer, or between the substrate and the bottom cavity layer if the buffer layer is not present; and a second mirror coating on the top cavity layer.
6. The semiconductor laser of claim 1 wherein the laser is electrically pumped and has edge emitting light, the semiconductor laser further comprising: a top waveguide layer above the active optical gain medium and a bottom waveguide layer one below the active optical gain medium; a top cladding layer and a bottom cladding layer for the top waveguide layer and the bottom waveguide layer repectively, each cladding layer being the side of the respective waveguide layer opposite that of the side adjoining the active optical gain medium, the cladding layers having a lower refractive index than that of the waveguide layers; a bottom electrode on the substrate; and a top electrode above the top cladding.
7. The semiconductor laser of claim 6 further comprising: a first mirror coating with a reflectance of between 30% and 100% on one edge of the semiconductor laser; and a second mirror coating with partial transmissivity on the opposite edge of the semiconductor laser.
8. The semiconductor laser of claim 1 wherein the laser is electrically pumped and has surface emitting light, the semiconductor laser further comprising: a top cavity layer above the active optical gain medium and a bottom cavity layer below the active optical gain medium; a first mirror coating between the buffer layer and the bottom cavity layer or between the substrate and the bottom cavity layer if the buffer layer is not present; a second mirror coating on the cavity layer which is above the active optical gain medium; a bottom electrode on the substrate; and a top electrode above the second mirror coating.
9. The semiconductor laser of claim 1 wherein the quantum dots are InGaN quantum dots and the barrier layers are made of GaN.
10. A method of making a semiconductor laser, comprising: optionally forming a buffer layer on a substrate; and forming a plurality of quantum dot layer pairs, on the buffer layer if the buffer layer is present and on the substrate if the buffer layer is not present, as an active optical gain medium, the forming of each quantum dot layer pair comprising: forming a quantum dot layer having quantum dots exhibiting at least one of compositional inhomogeneity, size inhomogeneity, and density variation and having a broadband of gain profile and a lasing spectral bandwidth of at least 2 nm; and forming a barrier layer.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the quantum dots exhibit compositional inhomogeneity, and wherein forming each quantum dot layer includes, during growth of the quantum dot layer, at least one of: varying a growth temperature; varying the energy of neutral nitrogen radicals; and varying the ion content in a nitrogen flux.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the quantum dots exhibit size inhomogeneity, and wherein forming each quantum dot layer includes, during growth of the quantum dot layer, at least one of: varying a growth temperature; varying a growth time; interrupting growth of the layer are various times; and varying a III/V ratio of deposited material.
13. The method of claim 12 wherein the quantum dots exhibit compositional inhomogeneity, and wherein forming each quantum dot layer includes, during growth of the quantum dot layer, at least one of: varying the energy of neutral nitrogen radicals; and varying the ion content in a nitrogen flux.
14. The method of claim 10 wherein the quantum dots exhibit compositional inhomogeneity, size inhomogeneity, and density variation.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein forming each quantum dot layer includes, during growth of the quantum dot layer, at least one of: varying a growth temperature; varying a growth time; interrupting growth of the layer are various times; varying a III/V ratio of deposited material; varying the energy of neutral nitrogen radicals; and varying the ion content in a nitrogen flux.
16. The method of claim 10 wherein forming each quantum dot layer comprises forming InGaN quantum dots and wherein forming each barrier layer comprises forming a GaN layer.
17. The method of claim 15 wherein forming each quantum dot layer comprises forming InGaN quantum dots and wherein forming each barrier layer comprises forming a GaN layer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] The features and advantages of embodiments of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment(s) with reference to the attached figures, wherein:
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[0024] It is noted that in the attached figures, like features bear similar labels.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Photoluminescence of Quantum Dots
[0025] One of the important aspects of the broadband lasers of the invention is to produce an optical gain medium, which can emit a broadband photoluminescence, a first and a necessary step to obtain broadband laser emission. The semiconductor InGaN is selected as the first optical gain medium since InGaN is a ternary compound semiconductor and its bandgap can be tuned to cover the entire visible spectrum by varying the ratio of In to Ga, or the factor x when using a more depicted formula In.sub.xGa.sub.x-1N. To broaden the bandgap for making broadband lasers, InGaN quantum dots with proper properties (size, compositions or densities) are used. Unlike bulk or quantum-well semiconductor active medium, the bandgap of quantum dots as well as their optical gain are the functions of the composition of the dots, their size, shapes and distributions, the dot density, etc. To achieve the desired emission spectral bandwidth (at least 2 nm, more preferably 2.5 nm, 4 nm, 4.5 nm, or 5 nm), it is critical to fabricate proper quantum dots to have the right optical properties. Otherwise, even if quantum dots are used in the laser structures, it is not possible to obtain broadband laser emission, as disclosed by Bhattacharya, in which the bandwidth of their lasers are 1 nm or less.
[0026] To demonstrate the broad emission optical properties of InGaN quantum dots, different intermediate photo-luminescent devices are fabricated with a structure shown in
[0027] The In.sub.xGa.sub.1-xiN quantum dots are grown by RF-plasma molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE). Other film growth methods such chemical vapour deposition (CVD) can also be used to produce the quantum dots.
[0028] The broadening of the gain spectrum of InGaN quantum dots is induced by both the inhomogeneity of the quantum dot size as well as by compositional inhomogeneity. The size randomness can be clearly seen in
[0029] The quantum dot size inhomogeneity is achieved in the present invention by the III/V ratio, growth temperature, and growth time and growth interruption. Due to the strained growth of InGaN on GaN, formation of InGaN quantum dots can occur via the Stranski-Krastanov mechanism, especially under nitrogen rich and low temperature growth conditions. Growth interruption at the completion of InGaN growth can also alter the quantum dot size distribution.
[0030] The compositional inhomogeneity of InGaN quantum dots during the growth are controlled by two effects: (i) phase segregation, and (ii) composition pulling effect. The phase segregation is due to the low miscibility of InN and GaN at the MBE growth temperature range. The composition pulling effect refers to the strain induced inhibition of indium incorporation at the growth front. Its consequence is non-uniform (increasing) indium concentration along the direction of the growth. As a result, the indium concentration varies slightly from one quantum dot layer to the following quantum dot layer in a structure as shown in
[0031] The compositional inhomogeneity of the InGaN quantum dots within the same layer is controlled by deposition parameters, including the growth temperature, the energy of neutral nitrogen radicals, and the ion content in the nitrogen flux. Compositional phase separation becomes progressively dramatic with higher growth temperature, lower energy nitrogen radicals, and higher ionic content. In addition, the compositional difference between phase A and phase B decreases with increasing energy of the nitrogen radicals and with decreasing ionic content in the nitrogen flux. The neutral radicals refer to atomic nitrogen and excited nitrogen molecules whose energy is controlled by the plasma power and the nitrogen gas flow. The ionic content in the nitrogen flux is regulated by using an electric field deflection mechanism. A growth parameters paradigm is thus established which allows the overall compositional inhomogeneity to be tuned to the desired range in order to achieve the required gain bandwidth. The growth temperature range is varied from a low of 620 C. to a high of 680 C.
[0032] The three devices for which the photoluminescence spectra are shown in
[0033] Many other photo-luminescent devices having different quantum dot layer thickness, barrier layer thickness, number of periods, or other growth conditions have also been fabricated and they all showed broadband emission at different wavelengths.
[0034] With the success in obtaining broadband gain medium based on quantum dots, it is now possible to make broadband semiconductor lasers to reduce lasers speckles, in accordance with the present invention. In the following text, four different embodiments of the broadband lasers of the present invention will be described in detail.
EMBODIMENTS
[0035] In accordance with the present invention, the embodiments disclosed herein are designed to ensure that the broadband quantum-dot gain medium is incorporated in proper cavity structures so that lasing conditions can be satisfied and laser light can be emitted from either the edge or surface of the laser devices.
Embodiment 1Optically Pumped Quantum Dot Lasers Having Edge Emitting Light
[0036] The first embodiment of the present invention is an optically pumped edge emitting quantum dot laser in a waveguide format and has a bandwidth at least 2 nm or higher. The schematic diagram of the laser device of this embodiment is shown in a cross-sectional view in
[0037] In operation, the device is illuminated with a shortwave light such as UV light from the top, bottom, or both. The UV light is absorbed by the gain medium to achieve the required population inversion for lasing. The laser cavity is formed by the two end surfaces or facets of the device having two optional mirror coatings. Since the semiconductor materials in the cavity have higher refractive index than the exit medium air, in some cases, the simply cleaved facets would have adequate reflection to provide the needed feedback for lasing. Cleaving is a common method used in the semiconductor industry to obtain a clean facet by splitting a crystal or crystalline substrate using a force along its plane with weaker chemical bonds in the crystal structure. However, the two optional mirror coatings are preferred since they can reduce the loss and thus reduce the lasing threshold and increase the efficiency of the device. The mirror coatings are made of metal or dielectric layers. The laser light is emitted from the edge, i.e. from at least one of the two facets. Since the cavity length of the laser device is rather long, in the range of tens microns to a few millimeters, the device can support many longitudinal modes with different wavelengths.
[0038] One working example of the first embodiment has InGaN quantum dots described above as the gain media, 10 periods of quantum dot layer pairs, two GaN waveguide layers about 100 nm in thickness, a 600 nm bottom cladding layer AlGaN, and 300 nm top cladding AlGaN layer. The structures were grown on a substrate made of HVPE bulk GaN templates with (1010.5 mm) dimension and dislocation density of less than 1E6 cm.sup.2. After growth, the laser wafers were cleaved into laser bars with cavity length of about 1 mm
[0039] The laser bars were optically pumped using a pulsed YAG laser at 355 nm having 10 ns pulses and 10 Hz repetition rate. The pumping beam was focused by a cylindrical lens to form a narrow stripe across the laser bar. The edge emission was detected by a CCD spectrometer.
[0040] Other examples of the optically pumped broadband visible laser in accordance with the present invention have also be fabricated with lasing wavelengths in the blue and green regions of the visible spectrum, and have spectral bandwidth values typically in the range of 5 nm to 15 nm.
[0041] A preliminary examination of the speckle reduction effect of the broadband lasers in the present invention was demonstrated in comparison with a conventional red semiconductor laser diode having a spectral bandwidth less than 2 nm. When the red laser beam is illuminated on a piece of paper with an optically rough surface, the photographed laser spot on the paper has prominent speckles as shown in
Embodiment 2Optically Pumped Quantum Dot Lasers Having Surface Emitting Light
[0042] For some applications, surface emitting lasers are more desirable since the emitted light has a circular angular distribution and it can be easily coupled into other optical components. A second embodiment of the present invention is an optically pumped surface emitting quantum dot laser and has a bandwidth at least 2 nm or higher. Unlike the edge emitting laser structured described above, the optical gain medium in the second embodiment is sandwiched between two reflectors with high reflectance to form the necessary feedback requirement.
[0043] The schematic diagram of the laser device of the second embodiment is shown in a cross-sectional view in
[0044] In operation, the device is illuminated with a shortwave light such as UV light from the top, bottom, or both. The top and bottom mirror coatings are designed to allow the pumping laser light having short wavelengths to pass through the mirror structure so that the light can reach the active gain medium in the centre. The UV light is absorbed by the gain medium to achieve the required population inversion for lasing. The laser cavity is formed by the top and bottom mirrors. The bottom mirror can be made of high and low index semiconductor layers which are compatible with the fabrication of the active laser structures. The top mirror can be made with similar coating materials as the bottom mirror coating or conventional all-dielectric coatings. The laser light is emitted from the top surface or the bottom surface, depending on which mirror coating has partial transmissivity for the lasing wavelength. The mirror coating on the side that the light emits should have a not too high reflectance so that the structure can support multiple wavelength lasing.
Embodiment 3Electrically Pumped Quantum Dot Lasers Having Edge Emitting Light
[0045] For many applications, electrically pumped lasers are more desirable because of their simplicity, compactness, and higher efficiency. The third embodiment of the present invention is an electrically pumped edge emitting quantum dot laser in a waveguide format and has a bandwidth at least 2 nm or higher. Unlike the optically pumped structures, which require the use of a short wavelength pumping light source, the electrically pumped lasers in the present invention use electrical current to provide the needed population inversion for lasing. To achieve this purpose, some of the layers in the laser structure must be n-doped or p-doped semiconductors so that electrons and holes move inside the structures. In addition, electrodes are required to introduce current across the laser device structures.
[0046] The schematic diagram of the laser device according to a third embodiment is shown in a cross-sectional view in
[0047] In operation, electrical current is added to the device through the top and bottom electrodes 992 and 994. The moving electrons will excite the gain medium inside the structure to a higher energy state to achieve the required population inversion for lasing. The laser cavity is formed by the two end surfaces or facets of the device having two optional mirror coatings. Since the semiconductor materials in the cavity have higher refractive index than the exit medium air, in some cases the simply cleaved facets would have adequate reflection to provide the needed feedback for lasing. However, the two optional mirror coatings are preferred since they can reduce the loss and thus reduce the lasing threshold and increase the efficiency of the device. The mirror coatings are made of metal or dielectric layers. The laser light is emitted from the edge, i.e. at at least one of the two facets. Since the cavity length of the laser device is rather long, in the range of tens microns to a few millimeters, the device can support many longitudinal modes with different wavelengths.
Embodiment 4Electrically Pumped Quantum Dot Lasers Having Surface Emitting Light
[0048] As in the case of embodiment 2, for some applications surface emitting lasers are more desirable since the emitted light has a circular angular distribution and it can be easily coupled to other optical components. The fourth embodiment of the present invention is an electrically pumped surface emitting quantum dot laser and has a bandwidth at least 2 nm or higher. Unlike the edge emitting laser structure described above in the third embodiment, the optical gain medium is sandwiched between two reflectors to form the necessary feedback requirement. Unlike the optically pumped structures, which require the use of a short wavelength pumping light source, the electrically pumped lasers in the present invention use electrical current to provide the needed population inversion for lasing. To achieve this purpose, some of the layers in the laser structure must be n-doped or p-doped semiconductors so that electrons and holes can move inside the structures. In addition, electrodes are required to introduce current across the laser device structures.
[0049] The schematic diagram of the laser device of this embodiment is shown in a cross-sectional view in
[0050] In operation, electrical current is added to the device through the top and bottom electrodes 1094 and 1092. The moving electrons will excite the gain medium inside the structure to a higher energy state to achieve the required population inversion for lasing. The laser cavity is formed by the top and bottom mirror coatings. The bottom mirror coating 1085 can be made of high and low index semiconductor layers which are compatible with the fabrication of the active laser structures. The top mirror coating 1090 can be made with similar coating materials as the bottom mirror coating 1085 or conventional all-dielectric coatings. The laser light is emitted from the top surface or the bottom surface, depending on which mirror coating has partial transmissivity for the lasing wavelength. The mirror coating on the side that the light emits should have a not too high reflectance so that the structure can support multiple wavelength lasing.
[0051] The embodiments presented are exemplary only and persons skilled in the art would appreciate that variations to the embodiments described above may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, different semiconductor materials whose bandgaps are in the visible spectral region can alternatively be used to make quantum dot lasers as described in the embodiments, or different lasing structures can be used. The scope of the invention is solely defined by the appended claims.