Internal efficiency of semiconductor lasers with a quantum-confined active region
- 25 February 2003
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics
- Vol. 39 (3) , 404-418
- https://doi.org/10.1109/jqe.2002.808171
Abstract
We discuss in detail a new mechanism of nonlinearity of the light-current characteristic (LCC) in heterostructure lasers with reduced-dimensionality active regions, such as quantum wells (QWs), quantum wires (QWRs), and quantum dots (QDs). It arises from: 1) noninstantaneous carrier capture into the quantum-confined active region and 2) nonlinear (in the carrier density) recombination rate outside the active region. Because of 1), the carrier density outside the active region rises with injection current, even above threshold, and because of 2), the useful fraction of current (that ends up as output light) decreases. We derive a universal closed-form expression for the internal differential quantum efficiency /spl eta//sub int/ that holds true for QD, QWR, and QW lasers. This expression directly relates the power and threshold characteristics. The key parameter, controlling /spl eta//sub int/ and limiting both the output power and the LCC linearity, is the ratio of the threshold values of the recombination current outside the active region to the carrier capture current into the active region. Analysis of the LCC shape is shown to provide a method for revealing the dominant recombination channel outside the active region. A critical dependence of the power characteristics on the laser structure parameters is revealed. While the new mechanism and our formal expressions describing it are universal, we illustrate it by detailed exemplary calculations specific to QD lasers. These calculations suggest a clear path for improvement of their power characteristics. In properly optimized QD lasers, the LCC is linear and the internal quantum efficiency is close to unity up to very high injection-current densities (15 kA/cm/sup 2/). Output powers in excess of 10 W at /spl eta//sub int/ higher than 95% are shown to be attainable in broad-area devices. Our results indicate that QD lasers may possess an advantage for high-power applications.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temperature-insensitive semiconductor quantum dot laserSolid-State Electronics, 2003
- Tunneling-injection quantum-dot laser: ultrahigh temperature stabilityIEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, 2001
- High-speed modulation and switching characteristics of In(Ga)As-Al(Ga)As self-organized quantum-dot lasersIEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 2000
- Performance and physics of quantum-dot lasers with self-assembled columnar-shaped and 1.3-/spl mu/m emitting InGaAs quantum dotsIEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 2000
- Quantum-dot heterostructure lasersIEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 2000
- Low-threshold oxide-confined 1.3-μm quantum-dot laserIEEE Photonics Technology Letters, 2000
- Theory of a self-assembled quantum-dot semiconductor laser with Auger carrier capture: Quantum efficiency and nonlinear gainApplied Physics Letters, 1998
- Temperature dependence of the threshold current density of a quantum dot laserIEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, 1998
- Charge neutrality violation in quantum-dot lasersIEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 1997
- Long-Wavelength Semiconductor LasersPublished by Springer Nature ,1986