A laser system having separately electrically operable cavities for emitting modulated narrow linewidth light with first, second and third mirror structures separated by a first active region between the first and the second and by a second active region between the second and the third. The second mirror structure has twenty of more periods of mirror pairs.
|
1. A laser system having separately electrically operable cavities for emitting modulated narrow linewidth light, said system comprising:
a compound semiconductor material substrate,
at least two first mirror pairs of semiconductor material layers in a first mirror structure on said substrate of a first conductivity type,
a first active region on said first mirror structure with plural quantum well structures,
at least twenty second mirror pairs of semiconductor material layers in a second mirror structure on said first active region of a second conductivity type,
a second active region on said second mirror structure with plural quantum well structures,
at least two third mirror pairs of semiconductor material layers in a third mirror structure on said second active region of said first conductivity type,
an intermediate electrical interconnection at said second mirror structure, and
a pair of electrical interconnections separated by said substrate, said first mirror structure, said first active region, said second mirror structure, said second active region, and said third mirror structure.
2. The system of
3. The system of
4. The system of
|
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 61/208,200 filed on Feb. 20, 2009 for “DIRECT MODULATED MODIFIED VERTICAL CAVITY SURFACE EMITTING LASERS” and hereby incorporates herein by reference that application.
The present invention relates to a modulated intensity output solid state laser and, more particularly, to a modulated intensity output vertical cavity surface emitting solid state laser.
Large numbers of closely spaced lateral circuit interconnections, extending between various portions of individual integrated circuit chips, between various integrated circuit chips mounted on a printed circuit board, and between various printed circuit boards mounted in a system, that can each transmit large numbers of signal symbols with extreme rapidity are increasingly needed. These interconnections are needed to move, between selected locations, the large amounts of data generated by very fast signal processors that appear on signal busses for transmitting signal symbols representing such data, data that is to be received and sent by those processors and by various related data receiving, using, generating and transmitting devices.
As chip area and board mounted component density increases, the numbers of unavoidable, but unwanted, electrical circuit couplings, or parasitics, will most certainly increase substantially. Dynamic power dissipation in on-chip and off-chip circuits for operating circuit interconnections comprises the vast majority of total power consumed. Dynamic dissipation scales linearly with switching speed, and so power consumption per line in electrical interconnections can be expected to soon outstrip that of their optical interconnection counterparts where the power dissipation is essentially independent of signal path length over those interconnections. Hence, there will be transitions in the future to optical interconnection based system architectures.
These optical interconnection arrangements will require low cost, low power, directly modulated, high-reliability, single-chip laser sources and source arrays operating at data rates in excess of 17 Gbps, now, but capable of reaching 100 Gbps in the future, to meet the demands of existing, and emerging future, serial chip and board data communications requirements. Such required capabilities for the laser sources lead to difficult requirements to be met by those sources in terms of power dissipation, reliability, and interconnection spatial densities.
Single lasers and one dimensional and two-dimensional laser arrays are needed for fiber optic links, board-to-board and chi-to-chip links. Each laser should dissipate less than 2 to 5 mW/laser. Reliability must be greater than 100,000 hours (10 years) at a minimum. Device-to-device uniformity needs to be high (variations being less than 5%), and device aging characteristics must be sufficiently slow to eliminate any need for power monitoring. Low device lasing thresholds and high modulation efficiencies will be required to minimize electrical power drains in the laser driver arrays. In addition, in the case of intra-chip optical interconnects, thermal dissipations pose a particularly challenging problem as the components may be expected to operate at ambient temperatures in excess of 80 C. This not only will have a significant impact on device intrinsic bandwidth, but on device reliability as well.
Vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELs) have been found to be suitable laser sources for short transmission distance optical networks with 10 Gbps VCSELs being the laser devices with the largest modulation rates commercially available today. VCSELs thus are the dominant light emission source for short transmission distance optical interconnection arrangements and local area networks because of their large modulation rate capabilities, low power consumption, spatially dense device array integration, and low cost manufacturing of those devices when made in sufficiently large numbers.
VCSEL sources that are directly modulated to correspondingly vary the emitted light intensity at large modulation rates offer a substantial decrease in cost over the typical alternative, a CW laser operated in conjunction with an external adjacent electro-absorption modulator. An important figure of merit for modulation rates in lasers is the −3 dB small-signal modulation bandwidth that is defined as the point at which the modulated optical output, measured as a function of frequency, is reduced to half of its low modulation rate value. A variety of methods have been used to achieve greater modulation rates of light intensities emitted by VCSELs. These have included use of metal contacts on polymer layers as well as ion implantation to reduce device capacitance to achieve small-signal modulation bandwidths of 16 to 20 GHz. Although state-of-art VCSELs in laboratories have been demonstrated to provide modulation bandwidths of 40 Gbps, current VCSEL technology makes achieving modulation bandwidths greater than 10 Gbps in practice very difficult because of reduced device reliability if operated at the large current densities required to do so. Therefore, VCSELs that can be reliably operated with greater modulation bandwidths are desired.
The present invention provides a laser system having separately electrically operable cavities for emitting modulated narrow linewidth light with the system having a compound semiconductor material substrate with at least two first mirror pairs of semiconductor material layers in a first mirror structure on the substrate of a first conductivity type and a first active region on that first mirror structure with plural quantum well structures. There is at least twenty second mirror pairs of semiconductor material layers in a second mirror structure on the first active region of a second conductivity type and a second active region on the second mirror structure with plural quantum well structures with at least two third mirror pairs of semiconductor material layers in a third mirror structure on the second active region of said first conductivity type. An intermediate electrical interconnection is provided at the second mirror structure and a pair of electrical interconnections are provided separated by the substrate, the first mirror structure, the first active region, the second mirror structure, the second active region, and the third mirror structure.
A multiple resonant cavity vertical cavity surface emitting laser, 1, permitting very large rates of modulation in connection with the coupling between those cavities, is shown on the right in (b) of
CRVCL 1 in this structure has the capability to change the photon density therein by varying the gain or absorption in an upper cavity, 10, comprising mirrors 3 and 6 along with active region 5′ therebetween, or in a lower cavity, 11, comprising mirrors 4 and 6 along with active region 5″ therebetween, while maintaining constant the current injection into the remaining other cavity (11 or 10, respectively), the further capability to detune an optical cavity by current injection, and the yet further capability to independently control carrier densities in both cavities to thereby aid in achieving very large intensity modulation rates. That is, the coupled cavities 10 and 11 in CRVCL 1, under appropriate biasing conditions, lead to an increase in the small-signal bandwidth.
The modulating current in CRVCLs of
In the first variant of the present invention, one cavity is forward biased, so that current is injected (in
The push-pull operating mode is illustrated in
In analyzing the small-signal response of a CRVCL under the first modulation process, combined current and electro-absorption modulation, a modified rate-equation model is used with two carrier populations and a single longitudinal mode to describe the modulation response. The assumption of a single longitudinal mode simplifies the rate equations, and is also appropriate for much of the operating range of the CRVCLs considered. Unlike the conventional modulation of a laser in which a small-signal is introduced through current modulation, the CRVCL undergoes the modulation of absorption loss through application of a reverse bias voltage to one of its cavities.
The rate equations for carrier and photon densities for current/electro-absorption modulation are derived by assuming only one optical mode is lasing, or
where N1 and N2 are the carrier densities in the two active regions (5′ and 5″) (l/cm3), τ1 and τ2 are the carrier lifetimes in the current modulation cavity (10 or 11) and electro-absorption modulation cavity (11 or 10), respectively, J is the injection current density (A/cm2), q is the elementary charge (C), d is the gain region thickness (cm), v is the group velocity of the optical mode in the material (cm/s), g is the material gain (cm−1), Γ is the optical confinement factor in the forward-biased cavity, τ1p is the photon lifetime, S is the photon density (l/cm3), β is the spontaneous emission factor, and RSp is the spontaneous emission rate per unit volume (l/cm3s). The quantities ξ1 and ξ2 represent the fraction of the optical standing wave overlapping with the current modulation cavity 10 or 11 and electro-absorption cavity 11 or 10, respectively. The electro-absorption modulation cavity 11 or 10 under reverse-bias behaves as a photodetector which converts the light emission from the current modulation cavity 10 or 11 into a photocurrent in the electro-absorption modulation cavity 11 or 10. This process is accounted by assuming the photodetector efficiency ηd in equation (2).
As evident in equation (4), the total response of the device under both current and electro-absorption modulation can be considered as a superposition of the response under conventional current modulation and electro-absorption modulation separately. If the electro-absorption modulation is removed, i.e. m=0, the total response will become that of a conventional laser under direct current modulation,
On the other hand, if the current modulation is removed by setting j(ω)=0, then the total response will be in the same form as the laser response under the electro-absorption modulation,
Comparing equations (6) and (7), the direct current modulation produces a relatively flat modulation response yet with somewhat limited 3-dB bandwidth, while the electro-absorption modulation produces the opposite. As illustrated in
Such a CRVCL allows detuning the cavity 10 and 11 lengths to permit each cavity to have a different optical standing-wave overlaps ξ1 and ξ2.
The second modulation process of a CRVCL, push-pull modulation, provides another means to decouple the photon density and current density and minimize the relaxation oscillation effect. For push-pull modulation, the forward-bias injection current through both the top 10 and bottom 11 cavities of a CRVCL will be modulated simultaneously but maintained out-of-phase. As the carrier density increases in one cavity, the carrier density in the other cavity decreases by an equal amount, maintaining a constant total carrier population. Hence, the net photon population essentially decouples from changes in carrier population, which results in the elimination of the relaxation oscillation peak.
Without losing generality, we will analyze a CRVCL in which both the upper 10 (output) and lower 11 cavities are current modulated. This is an extension of the analysis for the current modulation in one cavity. Assuming that only one optical mode is lasing, the rate equations can be written as:
where for cavity m, Nm is the carrier density (l/cm3), Jm is the injection current density (A/cm2), τm is the carrier lifetime (s), gm is the material gain (cm−1), Γm is the optical confinement factor, and the other parameters are defined the same as in equations (1) through (3).
The push-pull modulation response can be obtained by solving the rate-equations (8) through (10), yielding
where for cavity m, gm0 is the steady-state material gain (l/cm), gm′ is the differential gain (l/cm2), and ξm0 is the percentage of standing-wave overlap under steady-state. However, by assuming identical cavity conditions, equation (11) can be simplified to:
where A and θ account for the phase and amplitude difference between the small-signal current components such that
j2(ω)=A·j1(ω)·e4θ (13)
The response given by the equation (12) is similar to the modulation response of a conventional laser, with additional dependence on A and θ.
In push-pull modulation, the external observability of the modulation response of the two cavities must be determined, i.e. whether external light modulation occurs which can be used to carry information. Therefore push-pull modulation requires additional analysis to understand the effects on the longitudinal modes.
Longitudinal mode modulation arises from the dynamic cavity detuning under the (differential) current injection through both cavities 10 and 11, leading to a change in the relative coupling efficiencies of the top 3 and bottom 4 mirrors. Under the condition of A=1 and θ=π, in push-pull modulation, the carrier density always increases in one cavity 10 or 11 while it decreases in the remaining other cavity 11 or 10, respectively. Owing to the carrier-induced index change, the effective length for one cavity will decrease, while for the other cavity the length will increase. As a result, the optical mode will be either “pushed” towards the CRVCL substrate 12 producing less output light, or “pulled” towards the output facet 13 producing more output light as indicated in
The longitudinal mode modulation is assumed to be 10% of the available light at the output facet. This assumption will be justified later. The equation (12) is modified to account for the longitudinal mode modulation by adding an additional term:
where sout(ω) is the small-signal photon density at the laser facet. The factor 0.15% represents the percentage of the total internal intensity present at the output laser facet under steady-state conditions.
The calculations so far assume the identical top 10 and bottom 11 optical cavities. However, it can be expected that this may be difficult to achieve in practice. For example, different current densities J10 and J20 would likely result in different values of ξ1/ξ2, g1′/g2′ and g10/g20. Therefore, the full form of the modulation response given by equation (11) was invoked with the inclusion of the longitudinal mode modulation terms. It was found that the modulation response digresses from the ideal condition only slightly for a relatively large change in ξ1/ξ2, suggesting that a substantial fabrication tolerance exists.
Currently, intrinsic laser bandwidth and reliability at high current densities have been the modulation rate limiting factors in commercially available VCSEL-based transceivers, which generally operate at 10 Gb/s and below. Accordingly, at such frequencies, there is little need to be concerned about minimization of electrical parasitics affecting devices used therein. Of course, such parasitics are a fact of life and cannot simply be ignored, certainly not at larger frequencies.
Therefore, the improvements in intrinsic laser bandwidth afforded by push-pull modulation of the coupled cavities in a CRVCL device can only be taken advantage of in conjunction with a reduction in device parasitics. By far, the dominant parasitic element in VCSELs is the device contact bonding pad capacitance Cbp, which together with the differential series resistance Rd of the diode form a low pass filter with a cutoff frequency fc=½πRdCbp. The contact bonding pad is the metal area connected to terminals 7 and 9 which allow the device to be connected to the outside world, such as a driver I.C, by a bond wire or solder bump between the bonding pad and the IC. A capacitance is associated with the interface between this bonding pad metal and the semiconductor underneath. There is definitely something to be gained from minimizing the series resistance, but given the current advanced state-of-the-art in DBR design, it is probably not realistic to expect results significantly better than what is commonly achieved today. This is to say that Rd will almost certainly be in the range of 50 to 100 ohms for the 5 to 10 micron oxide aperture devices envisioned.
The foregoing analyses have illustrated the small-signal modulation response of the CRVCL. However, use in communication systems requires modulation using large amplitude signals. Therefore, we will describe specific structures, and the large-signal response of these structures.
As shown in
At the interfaces between the mirrors are two active regions 5′ and 5″ with each cavity total optical thickness equal to 1λ when cold, each containing two symmetric 65% AlGaAs spacer layers 21 and five 7 nm thick GaAs quantum wells 22 with eight barriers with x=0.25 separating and surrounding the quantum wells 23. The number of quantum wells could be as few as one, and as many as 7. Quantum well thickness could also vary from 5 nm to 10 nm, and the barrier layer thickness could also vary. Space layer compositions could vary from 30% to 70%. The substrate 12 is formed of GaAs.
Some additional layers are included in the structure to provide control over the current flow through the device. Included in the intermediate mirror 6 are two regions designated as oxidation structures 24. The x=0.98 layer 32 is partially oxidixed later in the process to confine the current to the center of the device. Other layers around the x=0.98 layer are lower Al content x=0.97 (33) and x=0.65 (34) and are designed to help control the thickness of the oxidation layer. Contact layers 25 at the top surface include a GaAs and AlGaAs layer with x=0.15 that are heavily doped to provide a low resistance contact to metals deposited on the top surface. The stop etch layer 26 and contact layer 27 are used to provide the metal contact for terminal 9 that contacts the intermediate mirror. The stop etch layer 26 is designed to be very slow etching so that a mesa can be etched down to this layer and stopped accurately. The contact layer 27 below it is more heavily doped and lower aluminum content so that we can make a low resistance contact to the structure.
Being a coupled-cavity resonator, the structure of
As shown in
Under cold (unpumped) conditions, the two optical cavities 10 and 11 are identical by design (Δn=0 in the figure). Any change in the relative refractive indices of the quantum wells 22 (Δn=nqw1−nqw2) will cause the relative optical thicknesses to change. In addition, the long and short mode field profiles behave in opposite respect. For example, as the optical path length of the active layer 5″ is decreased with respect to that of the upper active layer 5′, the peak field intensity of the short wavelength mode shifts to the lower cavity 11 while that of the long wavelength mode shifts to the upper cavity 10. As the modal field distributions change, so too does the relative efficiency with which the individual modes couple out of the resonator through either the top 3 or bottom 4 mirror as indicated in
The physical mechanism that changes the optical path lengths in the two active regions 5′ and 5″ is the change in refractive index of the GaAs quantum wells 22 with injected carrier density. This is the same mechanism that gives rise to transient and adiabatic chirp in all semiconductor lasers, a dynamic shift in laser frequency under modulation which ceases as the carrier density in the laser cavity reaches equilibrium. The magnitude of the effect is relatively small, with dn/dN being on the order of 1.2×10−20 cm−3. Given that the quantum wells 22 comprise approximately 15% of the 1λ active region 5′ or 5″, this implies that a ˜0.05% shift in the optical thickness of the spacers is achievable for a ΔN of ˜1e18 cm−3 (a reasonable number). While small, this degree of cavity shift is indeed adequate to achieve a significant (>3 dB) modulation in the output power of the device as is seen in the following.
The dynamic state of this structure is modeled using rate equations for the two carrier populations (upper 10 and lower 11 cavity) and two photon populations (long and short mode). The rate equations are set out in somewhat unconventional form in being in terms of the carrier densities N1 and N2 in the two active regions 5′ and 5″, and the total photon numbers SS and SL in the two optical modes. This is because, in this instance, the concept of expressing the mode equations in terms of photon densities using an equivalent mode volume is not easily accomplished due to the difficulty in defining mode volume in connection with photons. The four coupled differential equations are:
where,
τpL, τpS: photon lifetimes of long and short wavelength modes in seconds
vg: group velocity in cm/s
ηi: internal quantum efficiency
q: elementary charge in Coulombs
The Γ's are the 2×2 matrix of confinement factors of the two modes with the two active regions 5′ and 5″,
For the gain function, we have used the logarithmic expression
Here, g0 is the gain coefficient in cm−1, Ntr is the transparency carrier concentration, and N0 is a fitting parameter to account for absorption under low injection N<<Ntr. The terms χ1 and χ2 account for the gain suppression due to photon saturation
where Psat is the photon saturation density in cm−3.
The total power emitted, taken from the top mirror 3 is written as the sum of the power emitted from the short and long wavelength modes
Here, ηext is the external quantum efficiency αm/(αm+αi). θS and θL are functions that describe the relative power splitting between the top 3 and bottom 4 mirror for each mode
In all of the above, the Γ's, θ's, and τp's are all dynamic functions of the carrier densities N1 and N2.
Solving equations (16) through (19) and (23) in the time domain requires expressions as functions of the carrier densities N1 and N2 for the confinement factors Γ1 and Γ2, the output coupling functions θS and θL, and finally for the photon lifetimes τpS and τpL. Rather than resorting to a first-principles analytical treatment for the determination of these functional relationships, a behavioral approach is followed in which the parameters for the structure of
Associated with each mode is a photon lifetime, dependent upon the distributed mirror losses due to material absorption (αi) and transmission through the mirrors (αm):
where vg is the group velocity of the mode in question. The distributed mirror loss can be further separated into contributions from the top 3 and bottom 4 mirrors
αm=αmt+αmb (27a)
The emission from the device as observed through the top mirror 3 will be proportional to the ratio of the mirror losses
Requiring that
αm=αmt+amb=constant (28)
will assure that the modal threshold gain will remain constant, as τp is constant as well. By keeping the modal threshold gain constant, the carrier and photon populations will undergo a minimum perturbation as the mode “sloshes back and forth” between the upper 10 and lower 11 cavities.
The dependence of dτ/dn, the derivative of the photon lifetime with the index difference between the quantum wells in the two active regions nqw1-nqw2 on the values of Nt, Nb and Nc needs to be considered. The results show that for Nb−Nt=3, the photon lifetime is invariant with Δn under all DBR combinations.
This result merely states that, for τp to remain constant, the reflectivities of the upper 3 and lower 4 DBRs should be the same. The difference of 3 periods accounts for the fact that the upper DBR 3 is terminated in air while the lower DBR 4 is terminated in GaAs 12. Therefore, for the remainder of the modeling exercise, we set Nb−Nt=3, so that,
τpL=τpS=τp (29)
The output coupling coefficients θS(N1,N2) and θL(N1,N2) are calculated as the ratios of the Poynting vector magnitudes of the modal e-fields taken at the top 3 and bottom 4 mirrors
The long and short wavelength modes are found to be symmetric in Δn such that θL(Δn)=θS(−Δn).
These output coupling coefficients have been found to be quite well approximated by an exponential for small Δn, and so the functions for the coupling coefficients have been chosen as
Equations (31) and (32) are substituted into (24) for the numerical time domain simulation. For each different value of Nc examined, the values for K and Q can be extracted. The values for K and Q are tabulated in
The maximum power deviation coupled through the top mirror 3 of the device through aperture 13 under modulation can be expressed in the form of an extinction ratio
ER=θ(Δn)/θ(−Δn) (33)
This extinction ratio is an important parameter for communication applications, as one wants a large contrast between the amount of light emitted from the device in the on-state and the off-state. Communication standards will often specify a minimum acceptable extinction ratio.
The confinement factors
Γ1S=Γ2L=Γ1; Γ1L=Γ2S=Γ2 (34)
can be calculated using equation (20) for various values of Nc, again with Nb−Nt=3.
We find that for small Δn, the confinement factors Γ1 and Γ2 are reasonably well approximated as linear functions of Δn, and so express them as
Equations (35) and (36) are substituted into equations (16) through (19) for the numerical time domain simulation. For each different value of Nc examined, we extracted values for Γ0 and dΓ/dn.
Performance was evaluated for numerous cases as Nc was varied from 25 to 50, all with Nt=17 and Nb=20. The values of Nc correspond to an intermediate mirror reflectivity of greater than 99%.
Performance was evaluated by the measurement of eye diagrams using symmetrical current modulation (i.e. I1=Ibias+/−Imod and I2=Ibias−/+Imod) in each cavity and long pattern length pseudorandom pulse sequences. An eye diagram consists of overlapping the signals from a long string of random “1”s and “0”s. An example is shown in the inset picture in
After the initial turn-on transient, the response settles down as in a typical laser response. As expected, the modulation present in the carrier densities is small, with the average being almost flat. The output power is entirely dominated by the short wavelength mode. The modulation of the long mode's confinement factor, and hence its threshold gain, is 180 degrees out of phase with the current modulation in the two active regions. Hence, the long wavelength mode is almost completely suppressed and never reaches threshold.
As shown in the insert, the eye diagram is very clean. There is a complete lack of deterministic jitter and overshoot, in spite of the relatively large extinction ratio and low Ibias the average current through the device. Note that the rise and fall characteristics look far different from those of a typical semiconductor laser.
In contrast,
In this case, there is a much larger modulation of the carrier density, and there is severe eye diagram closure due to deterministic jitter and overshoot. Certainly, the eye diagram could be improved by increasing the bias current to unrealistic levels, but, when driven at the same current density, the CRVCL has far superior modulation characteristics.
We have found that Nc needs to be larger than 20 periods, or equivalently, the intermediate mirror reflectivity needs to be greater than 99%, for a minimum 2 dB extinction ratio. For other emission wavelengths and materials systems, the intermediate mirror reflectivity requirement of greater than 99% for good extinction ratio remains the same. However, this requirement may result in a different number of intermediate mirror pairs, depending upon the refractive index differences of the materials used in the mirror.
Small signal scattering parameter S21 response characteristics were examined for a CRVCL with Nc=50 and a conventional VCSEL with the same material parameters, aperture size, and photon lifetime. S21 is a forward transmission coefficient, and describes the ratio of an output signal (optical in this case) to an input signal (electrical in this case) for the CRVCL. The S21 curves for the CRVCL are the four solid lines, and the S21 signal curves for the conventional VCSEL are the dotted lines.
The CRVCL 3 dB bandwidth is shown to improve with modulation depth.
Also shown in the figure is a bias and modulation arrangement example for the push-pull mode of operation. Bias is applied via a current source to the intracavity contact 9, whereas the modulating voltage is applied to the upper cavity via a topside contact 7. As the device behaves in a circuit sense essentially as a back-to-back diode, modulating the device in such fashion directly leads to the desired differential modulation of the cavity currents. This arrangement allows for the minimization of the bonding pad size, and avoids any parasitics which might otherwise be a factor should modulation have been applied via the intracavity contact. In any case, minimizing stray parasitics is important.
As shown in
The epitaxial structure in the device example contains 17 to 20 top 3 n-doped DBR pairs, 20 to 23 bottom 4 n-doped DBR pairs, and 38 to 50 intermediate 6 p-doped DBR pairs. All DBRs consist of x=0.15/x=0.95 AlGaAs layers 18,19 with 20 nm linear compositional and doping grades 20 to reduce the series resistance. The p DBRs and n DBRs are doped ˜3e18 cm−3 and ˜2e18 cm−3 respectively, with the doping in the 6 pairs adjacent to the cavities reduced by ˜50% to reduce free carrier absorption. The 5 central mirror pairs in the low field region of the intermediate DBR are highly doped (p>5e18 cm−3) for improved current spreading, with one pair doped >2e19 cm−3 to facilitate the Ti/Au unalloyed ohmic contact 9, which is made to a 12 nm thick GaAs layer 27 placed at a standing wave node to minimize absorption. Adjacent to and immediately above the contact layer is a 10 nm thick GalnP layer 26 for use as an etch stop during the intracavity contact etch. A 15 nm thick GaAs ohmic contact layer doped n>>8e18 cm−3 caps off the structure 25.
The active regions 5′ and 5″ each have five undoped 7 nm thick GaAs quantum wells 22 with 6 nm thick barriers 23 of undoped x=0.25 AlGaAs between the quantum wells and 20 nm of the barrier material on either side of the quantum well region. The remaining cavity spacer material is of low doped (n,p<5e17 cm−3) x=0.65 AlGaAs 21.
The oxide aperture layers 24 consist of 20 nm thick x=0.98 AlGaAs 32, bounded on one side by 12 nm of x=0.97 AlGaAs 33, and x=0.65 AlGaAs 34 on the other. This design yields a slightly tapered oxide “tip” in order to reduce diffraction losses.
The process flow requires 6 photolithographic steps, represented by the individual layers in sequence:
a. Intracavity contact etch
b. Mesa/trench etch
c. Isolation implant
d. Intracavity contact ohmic metallization
e. Topside ohmic metal
f. Thick interconnect and bondpad metal
Referring to
While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment(s), it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
Chen, Chen, Brenner, Mary K., Choquette, Kent D., Johnson, Klein L.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
6936486, | Nov 19 2002 | JDS Uniphase Corporation | Low voltage multi-junction vertical cavity surface emitting laser |
7169629, | Oct 07 2003 | Industrial Technology Research Institute | VCSEL and the fabrication method of the same |
7215692, | Dec 18 1995 | Lumentum Operations LLC | Conductive element with lateral oxidation barrier |
20040096996, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Jun 21 2014 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Dec 21 2014 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jun 21 2015 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Jun 21 2017 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Jun 21 2018 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Dec 21 2018 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jun 21 2019 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Jun 21 2021 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Jun 21 2022 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Dec 21 2022 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Jun 21 2023 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Jun 21 2025 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |