Generally, the field of the present invention is semiconductor diode lasers. More particularly, the invention relates to flared laser oscillator waveguides and diode laser packages utilizing the same.
Multimode laser diodes, also known as broad area lasers (BALs), have the property that their slow-axis beam-parameter-product (BPP) and their slow-axis brightness (power÷BPP2) degrade progressively when they are driven at higher current to generate higher power. Brightness can be improved in BALs by reducing the emitter width; however, the current at which the maximum brightness occurs also happens at progressively lower current values. Hence, the maximum output power at the maximum brightness also drops. For power-scaling applications and reducing the cost-per-watt of producing diode lasers, higher brightness at higher output power per emitter is very desirable.
Semiconductor diode lasers are formed by growing multiple layers of semiconductor materials on a suitable substrate with a lattice constant that allows choice of materials to produce desired emission wavelengths. A typical semiconductor laser comprises n-type layers, p-type layers and an undoped active layer between them such that when the diode is forward-biased, electrons and holes recombine in the active region layer to produce light. The active layer (quantum well(s), quantum wire(s) or quantum dots, type-II quantum well(s)) resides in the waveguide layer which has a higher index of refraction compared to the surrounding p- and n-doped cladding layers. Light generated from the active layer is confined in the plane of the waveguide.
A conventional edge-emitting Fabry Perot broad area laser diode is arranged as a rectangular gain or index-guided semiconductor structure. Opposing end facets of the waveguide define high and partial reflectors to provide feedback for oscillation of light within the resonator. The multi-layered semiconductor laser diode structure extends the length of the laser and has a broad width for electrical injection extending to opposite side surfaces which also extend the length of the laser. The multi-layered semiconductor materials are typically arranged so that the laser operates in a single mode along the growth direction of the laser and this direction is defined as fast-axis direction. Since along the fast-axis direction the semiconductor laser operates in a single mode, the brightness of laser diode in this direction cannot be improved any further—it is so called diffraction-limited. The distance between the top and bottom surfaces of the multi-layered semiconductor laser structure thus provides the smaller dimension of the end facets, i.e., the thickness of the stripe, typically on the order of microns. On the other hand, the width of the multi-layered laser structure provides the larger dimension of the end facets, i.e., the stripe-width is typically on the order of many tens of microns to hundreds of microns. Because the stripe width is much larger than the wavelength of light, the lateral property of an optical field propagating along the optical axis of the waveguide is highly multimode along the longer stripe dimension and the corresponding axis is described as slow-axis.
Diode laser ridge waveguide structures with single-mode structural characteristics across the slow-axis have been described which may be suitable for lower powers where single-mode performance is desirable. For example, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,014,396 to Osinki et al. a flared semiconductor optoelectronic device is disclosed that has a double-flared structured. Other examples of conventional ridge waveguide structures can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,623,555 and 6,798,815. These devices have single mode beam quality in both directions but such performance comes at the expense of limited output power. However, the problem of scaling to higher powers while maintaining superior brightness continues to pose a challenge in the art of diode lasers, particularly where devices are highly multimode across the slow axis, and so a need remains for improvements associated therewith, including diode laser packages utilizing such improvements.
Accordingly, the present invention satisfies the aforementioned need by providing an innovation in broad area semiconductor diode laser technology which includes providing a flared laser oscillator waveguide (FLOW) with a flared current injection region extending and widening between a multimode high reflector facet and a partial reflector facet. By narrowing the width of the electrically-pumped stripe towards the high reflector facet, the higher order modes with higher divergence angles are prevented from coupling back into the laser. As a result, the slow-axis divergence of the laser is smaller compared to a device with rectangular geometry having the same width for the partial reflector.
Furthermore, light propagating in the flared current injection region can form a thermal waveguide that is closer to the width of the narrower, high reflector side causing a beam output at the partial reflector facet to have a substantially narrower beam width than the partial reflector facet width. As a result, the-beam-parameter-product, BPP (slow-axis near-field width times the slow-axis divergence) is smaller for FLOW devices compared to BAL devices. Since the near-field is smaller than the physical width at the partial reflector side, FLOW devices can be designed to have a larger total area compared to BAL without sacrificing BPP. The enlarged total pumped area provided by the flaring of the flared current injection region serves to reduce thermal resistance and electrical series resistance in the device, resulting in higher electrical-to-optical power conversion efficiency. This leads to higher output power at a given operating current compared to BAL devices. Higher power and smaller BPP leads to increased beam brightness in the slow-axis.
In addition to the application to broad area diode lasers, the FLOW concept can also be applied to other types of semiconductor-based Fabry-Perot lasers, such as quantum cascade laser (QCL), interband quantum cascade lasers (IQL), by way of example. Broad area diode lasers with flared laser oscillator waveguides can also find particular use in laser diode modules, which can be configured for various applications such as fiber-coupling or direct pumping, and including laser pumping of fiber, solid state, semiconductor or gas laser gain media.
Thus, in one aspect of the present invention, a broad area semiconductor diode laser device includes a multimode high reflector facet, a partial reflector facet spaced from the multimode high reflector facet, and a flared current injection region extending and widening between the multimode high reflector facet and the partial reflector facet, wherein the ratio of a partial reflector facet width to a high reflector facet width is n:1, where n>1.
In another aspect of the present invention, a multimode flared laser oscillator waveguide includes a semiconductor gain volume having a multimode high reflector and an output coupler oppositely disposed and spaced apart by a resonator length, top and bottom oppositely disposed sides spaced apart by a resonator height, and first and second oppositely disposed flared sides spaced apart by a variable resonator width providing the high reflector with a shorter width than the output coupler.
In another aspect of the present invention a flared laser oscillator waveguide includes a semiconductor gain volume which includes a high reflector surface and an opposing partial reflector surface spaced apart from each other by a resonator length, top and bottom opposite surfaces spaced apart by a resonator height, and first and second opposite side surfaces spaced apart by a resonator width, wherein at least a portion of the opposite side surfaces are spaced apart by a variable resonator width forming a flared oscillator region and providing the high reflector surface with a shorter width than the partial reflector surface.
In another aspect of the present invention a high brightness diode laser package includes a plurality of flared laser oscillator waveguides arranged on a stepped surface to emit respective laser beams in one or more emission directions, a plurality of optical components situated to receive the laser beams from the plurality of flared laser oscillator waveguides and to provide the beams in a closely packed relationship, and an optical fiber optically coupled to the closely packed beams for coupling the laser beams out of the diode laser package.
In another aspect, a high brightness diode laser package includes a plurality of flared laser oscillator waveguides arranged on a stepped surface to emit respective laser beams in one or more emission directions, a plurality of optical components situated to receive the laser beams from the plurality of flared laser oscillator waveguides and to provide the beams in a closely packed relationship, and an optical fiber optically coupled to the closely packed beams for coupling the laser beams out of the diode laser package, wherein the plurality of flared laser oscillator waveguides includes a first set of three or more of the flared laser oscillator waveguides arranged on a first stepped surface portion of the stepped surface at successive heights thereof such that a first set of beams is emitted parallel to each other and the first stepped surface portion in a first stepped configuration in a first emission direction, and wherein the plurality of optical components includes a first set of optical components associated with the first set of three or more flared laser oscillator waveguides, the first set of optical components including fast-axis collimation optics and slow-axis collimation optics for collimating the respective fast and slow axes of the first set of beams and beam-turning optics coupled to each first set beam so as to provide each first set beam in a first set turn direction such that the first stepped configuration of beams becomes a first stacked configuration of beams.
The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying figures.
Referring to
With additional reference to
Representative beam 20 is also shown being emitted from front facet 16 of optical resonator 24 in
The beam parameter product (BPP) and beam brightness are important characteristics for laser pumping and for other applications of the device 10. The beam parameter product is a measure of beam quality and is given by the product of the divergence angle of a beam with its waist radius. Minimum beam parameter products are desirable for many applications. In typical broad stripe diode structures slow axis BPP increases as injected current increases due to increase in far-field divergence angle, leading to less desirable beam characteristics as the diodes are driven to higher output powers. Beam brightness is a measure of diode performance and is given by the quotient of beam power and BPP. A higher brightness is desirable for many laser applications, particularly for higher power applications like brightness conversion in fiber lasers. It is also important for optically coupling light into fibers more generally. Brightness is typically approximately flat or increases somewhat as a function of input current for conventional broad area laser diodes.
For example, a BPP-current relation 40 is shown in
In addition to substantial improvement in BPP, brightness of devices 10 in accordance with aspects of the present invention can also experience substantial gains in unexpected fashion. For example, a brightness-current relation 44 is shown in
The substantial improvements in BPP and brightness can be attributed in part to the near field performance of beams emitted by devices 10.
By selecting the HR back facet 14 to have a narrower width than the PR front facet 16 (i.e., a<A), lateral mode control is introduced into the device 10. Also, the HR back facet 14, as opposed to the PR front facet 16, is selected to have a narrower width since higher order modes reflected at the facet 14 are diffracted at an angle such that the higher order modes do not propagate back into the electrically-pumped region of the device 10. Accordingly, fewer lateral optical modes are propagated in a device 10 across the slow axis compared to a conventional straight broad area laser diode having the same width ‘A’ for PR output facet 16. Additionally, as the fewer mode light propagates back through the resonator 24, a thermal waveguide is formed therein running the length of the resonator 24 and having a width that is closer to the width ‘a’ of the narrower high reflecting back facet 14. The corresponding narrower thermal waveguide limits the effective spot size of the beam 20 to a substantially narrower spot 21 as the beam exits the front facet 16. The substantially narrower spot 21 can be narrower by 5%, 20%, 50% or more, for example, and is typically dependent on the input current to the device 10, as illustrated in
Referring to
Referring now to
Referring now to
With respect to embodiments described in
Various examples of the flared laser oscillator waveguide devices in accordance with the present invention can be gain-guided or index-guided which can be implemented in different ways, though the methods described herein are not intended as exhaustive. For example, in a gain-guided design, a p-contact can be delineated in accordance with the top view current injection region perimeters described in
In
Difference between back facet width ‘a’ and portion width ‘g’ is also possible, as illustrated in the alternative embodiments shown in
In
Various scattering patterns, such as scattering elements 138, 148, 158, are defined in flared laser oscillator waveguide devices of the present invention in order to introduce loss of higher order modes of laser light propagating therein for improved beam output. While different geometric examples are described, the scattering patterns can generally be configured to overlap the modal content of the laser light to achieve higher order mode suppression. Scattering patterns can be formed in a variety of ways to realize mode-stripping effects, including the non-resonant grating, formation of micro-structures that include features with index contrast, or formation of a second-order grating, in the selected patterned area.
Referring now to
While in conventional distributed feedback semiconductor laser diode devices the width of the grating at the front facet is typically coextensive with the width of the front facet and the area of the grating is coextensive with the pumped area of the diode, in devices in accordance with the present invention the width ‘d’ of the grating 206 can be selected to be the same or preferably narrower than the width ‘A’ of the front facet 204. In some examples the width of the grating 206 varies along the length of the region 200. Since the grating 206 has a smaller area than the entirety of region 200, the total scattering loss introduced by imperfections in the grating is reduced, leading to improved operating efficiency.
In
Flared laser oscillator waveguides are particularly well-suited for use in diode laser packages. For example, slow axis divergence for flared laser diodes changes less as a function of current as compared to conventional non-flared broad area laser diodes. Consequently, several industrial applications stand to benefit, such as fiber laser and DPSS pumping, from the predictable NA. In addition to providing advantages to power and brightness, the flared nature of the output coupler reduces facet irradiance directly resulting in lower current density, a cooler junction temperature, reduced probability for catastrophic optical damage to the diode facet, and therefore improved reliability. Moreover, the slope of wavelength change with respect to current is reduced, resulting in more predictability output and easier wavelength locking with gratings.
Representative Diode Laser Package Embodiments
Example 1
Referring to
Beams emitted by diode lasers 308 and are received and collimated by fast axis collimation optics 312 and slow axis collimation optics 314. Optional volume Bragg grating elements 313 can be positioned between the fast axis and slow axis collimation optics 312, 314 to provide locking of the wavelength of the lasers 308. Turning mirrors 316 receive the collimated beams which are propagating generally parallel to each other. Mirrors 316 are configured to reflect the beams at a right angle such that the parallel propagating beams are redirected such that the fast axes of each beam are stacked one above the other in a closely packed relationship due to the stepped heights of the beams. Multiple mirrors 316 and slow axis collimation optics 314 can be conveniently disposed on a common surface 318 though mirrors 316 include different heights such that the turned beams are not clipped by subsequent mirrors 316. For example, in
In one example of package 300, a brightness of about 1.3 W/(mm-mrad)2 or greater can be achieved with flared laser oscillator waveguides having a ratio of a partial reflector facet width to a high reflector facet in the range of about 1.1 to 1.45. Far field divergence of about 8 degrees can be achieved resulting in a total power output of about 47 W coupled into a 105 μm 0.22 NA fiber. The above specifications represent a substantial improvement over a package utilizing conventional broad area diode lasers having equal emitter and high reflector widths.
Example 2
With reference to
One or more common surfaces 344 can be used to mount multiple sets of turning mirrors and slow axis collimation optics for convenient manufacture, and to avoid clipping of beams the mirrors can have different heights. An objective lens 346 is situated to receive the stacked beams and couple the beams into the fiber 334. In some examples, which may also be used in other various package embodiments herein, a volume Bragg grating 348 can be coupled to each of the beams, sets of beams, or all of the beams, such that grating 348 reflects a portion of the laser beam light back towards the diodes 332 in order to lock of the wavelengths thereof. In one example of package 330, a brightness of about 1.2 W/(mm-mrad)2 can be achieved with flared laser oscillator waveguides having a ratio of a partial reflector facet width to a high reflector facet in the range of about 1.1-1.45. Far field divergence of about 10 degrees can be achieved resulting in a total power output of over 65 W coupled into a 105 μm 0.22 NA fiber. Once again, the above specifications represent a substantial improvement over packages utilizing conventional broad area diode lasers having equal emitter and high reflector widths.
Example 3
Referring now to
Beams are collimated by fast axis collimation optics 370 and slow axis collimation optics 372. Reflectors 364, slow axis collimation optics 372, as well as other optical components, can be conveniently situated one or more common surfaces 374, with two such surfaces being shown in
A first set of beams corresponding to diodes 362a is coupled into a half-wave plate 376 configured to rotate the polarization of the first set of beams. The first set of beams is then reflected by the polarization multiplexer optic 366 to become directed to a focusing optic 378. A second set of beams corresponding to diodes 362b is coupled through surfaces of the polarization multiplexer 366 such that first and second sets of beams can form overlapping beams 380 as shown in
While a total of twelve emitters are shown in
Example 4
With reference now to
In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the disclosed invention may be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are only preferred examples of the invention and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims. We therefore claim as our invention all that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/938,199, filed Nov. 11, 2015, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/249,276, filed Apr. 9, 2014, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,214,786, issued Dec. 15, 2015, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/011,661, filed Aug. 27, 2013, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,166,369, issued Oct. 20, 2015, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/810,261, filed Apr. 9, 2013, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
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20170288364 A1 | Oct 2017 | US |
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Parent | 14249276 | Apr 2014 | US |
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Parent | 14011661 | Aug 2013 | US |
Child | 14249276 | US |