In general, the invention relates generally to quantum cascade devices. In more detail, the invention relates to a high power quantum cascade superluminescent emitter.
Superluminescent (“SL”) emitters with low temporal and high spatial coherence have found applications in medical imaging and industrial process monitoring. A particular example of an application using such light sources that emit in the near-infrared is in optical coherence tomography (“OCT”) for real-time 3D imaging of the human eye. Extending OCT into the mid-infrared (“mid-IR”) region can enable a hyperspectral imaging system that can visualize deep structures such as microchannels inside ceramics and differentiate between biological compounds such as healthy and cancerous tissues. In particular, extending OCT to the mid-IR will potentially expand biomedical imaging to cancerous tissues and compounds such as collagen amide, phosphate and carbonate, which have strong absorption spectra in the mid-IR. Mid-IR OCT systems can also aid in industrial process monitoring. However, the lack of an appropriate high power, low coherent mid-IR light source has prevented the realization of mid-IR OCT systems.
Quantum cascade (“QC”) devices present themselves as potential superluminescent light sources in the mid-IR and therefore provide a possible light source for mid-IR OCT. Realizing a compact and low cost mid-IR light source practical for these applications requires the development of milliwatt level QC superluminescent (“QCSL”) devices, which operate at room temperature. However, it is challenging to achieve milliwatts of SL power in QCSL devices due to low spontaneous emissions caused by the short non-radiative carrier lifetime of the intersubband transitions.
The effect of a tilted front facet on the device performance of QC lasers has previously been studied and the use of a 17° tilted angle was found to reduce the front facet's reflectivity by up to approximately 10−2 without significantly compromising the slope efficiency. In addition, attempts to generate superluminescence from QC lasers through suppressing the laser action in a 2 mm long Fabry-Perot cavity by replacing one of the cleaved facets with a wet-etched sloped facet yield a peak optical power of 25 μW at 10 K. However, none of these approaches have yielded sufficient optical power via amplified spontaneous emission (“ASE”) in QC emitters.
A quantum cascade emitter comprises a cavity comprised of a semiconductor material, a first low-reflectivity facet coupled to a first end of said cavity, and a second low-reflectivity facet coupled to a second end of the cavity.
A method for generating a high power superluminescent light in a quantum cascade device comprises terminating a semiconductor cavity at a first end with a rounded shaped wet-etched sloped facet and terminating said semiconductor cavity at a second end with a tilted cleaved facet, second tilted cleaved facet allowing light to exit from said cavity.
A quantum cascade emitter comprises a spiral cavity comprised of a semiconductor material, a first low-reflectivity facet coupled to a first end of said spiral cavity; and a second low-reflectivity element coupled to a second end of said spiral cavity.
Applicants have developed an apparatus and method for generating high peak power in a QCSL device by employing a semiconductor cavity coupled to a low reflectivity front facet and a low reflectivity back facet. Applicants have realized several QCSL high power designs described herein: (1) a linear geometry with a tilted cleaved facet and a rounded shaped wet-etched sloped facet; (2) a spiral geometry with a tilted cleaved facet and a rounded shaped wet-etched sloped facet and (3) a spiral geometry with a tilted cleaved facet and a rounded shaped passive loop facet.
As will become evident as the invention is further described, Applicants have devised an apparatus and method that yields at least a three order of magnitude improvement in superluminescence output power in QC emitters by designing the cavity made from the combination of a 17° tilted cleaved facet and a rounded shaped wet-etched sloped facet. Such a design can greatly reduce the optical feedback, suppressing the lasing and thus generating high power superluminescence. According to alternative embodiments, the output power may be further enhanced by the addition of Si3N4 layer on the rounded shaped we-etched sloped facet as an anti-reflection coating. This enables realization of more than 10 milliwatt output power of superluminescence. Further, according to certain embodiments, by employing the spiral cavity, longer devices can be fabricated more compactly, which enables realization of more than 30 mW of superluminescent power.
The maximum superluminescence output power for a QCSL device may be achieved at laser threshold. A large cavity and low facet reflectivities are required to generate high power superluminescence from QCSL devices. Due to these requirements, QCSL devices intrinsically have high laser thresholds, which should be maintained within the limitations of the available current source. Because the the laser threshold current density does not change significantly with the width of the cavity but decreases with the inverse of the length of the cavity, for a given area of device, a thinner and longer cavity is more suitable than a wider and shorter device to achieve maximum ASE at room temperature within the current source limitations.
The maximum ASE output intensity originating from a spontaneously emitting point source Ispon a distance 1 away from the front facet with a reflectivity RF occurs at the lasing threshold and behaves as:
where
and Rf and Rb are the respective reflectivities of the front and back facets coupled to the semiconductor cavity.
Because the ASE output power is linearly proportional to the length of the cavity, 1, it is desirable to increase the length of the cavity to achieve greater power. However, it is also desirable to also maintain a compact design as longer devices are impractical and introduce additional fragility. Furthermore, in order to prevent operation in the lasing regime and thus generate high power superluminescence, it is desirable to minimize the reflectivities of the front and back facets.
I. High Peak Power QC Emitter
Semiconductor cavity 102 is coupled to first low-reflectivity facet 108(a) and a second low-reflectivity facet 108(b). Although
II. Linear Geometry with Tilted Cleaved Facet and Rounded Shaped Wet-Etched Sloped Facet
A. Facet Structure and Reflectivities
According to one embodiment, the reflectivity RSWESF 104 shown in
According to one embodiment, a ridge cavity is tilted from the cleavage plane by 17° and provides suppression of the residual reflection from TCF 106. The 17° tilt angle falls below the critical angle (approximately 18°) of total internal reflection of the material utilized in QCSL emitter 100 and provides reflectivity as low as approximately 0.01.
B. QC Structure and Fabrication
According to one embodiment, the QC structure for QCSL emitter 100 may be grown by metal organic chemical vapor deposition (“MOCVD”) on an InP substrate using strain-balanced In 0.66 Ga 0.34 As/Al 0.69 In 0.31 As material. According to this embodiment, 40 repetitions of an injector/active region are sandwiched by low doped (cm-3) InP claddings layers. According to this same embodiment, each injector region may utilize a sheet doping density of 1.1011 cm-2. The waveguides may be patterned by photolithography and wet-etched to approximately 6 μm deep.
According to one embodiment QCSL emitter 100 utilizes an “ultrastrong coupling” scheme, employing a thin injection barrier (approximately 10 Å), which increases the energy splitting between the injector ground level and the upper laser level (15 meV compared to approximately 5 meV in conventional designs) and improves electron transport.
4.2/1.15/3.9/1.4/3.4/2/2.8/1.65/2.3/1.5/1.9/1.3/1.8/1.5/1.75/1.7/1.6/1.65/1.4/1.4/1.1/1.15,
where the In0.31Al0.69As barriers are in bold, and the In0.66Ga0.34As wells are in normal text. According to one embodiment, the underlined layers are doped with a doping density of 1.5×1017 cm−3. State pairs 132(a)-132(d) shown in
C. Exemplary Dimensions
According to one embodiment, QCSL emitter 100 employing linear cavity 102 may be fabricated at an exemplary length of 8 mm long and a width of either 15 μm or 25 μm. According to one embodiment, these exemplary lengths were chosen accordingly to achieve milliwatt ASE power while keeping the threshold current within the capacity of the current source used at room temperature. However, it will be understood that these dimensions are merely exemplary and not intended to limit the scope of the invention described herein.
D. Experimental Results
As shown in
144(a) shows an interferogram of a 15 μm wide linear QCSL device employing a TCF front facet and a RCWESF back facet at threshold at 80 K. The emission spectra shown in 144(a) was measured at the threshold with a FTIR with 16 cm−1 resolution in the slow scan mode.
142(b) shows emission spectra of a 15 μm (300 K) and 25 μm (250 K) wide linear QCSL devices employing a TCF front facet and a RCWESF back facet at threshold in step scan (16 cm−1 resolution) and associated Gaussian fits of spectra.
144(b) shows an interferogram of a 15 μm wide linear QCSL device employing a TCF front facet and a RCWESF back facet at threshold at 300 K.
According to one embodiment, linear QCSL devices employing a TCF front facet and a RCWESF back facet, achieve room temperature operation with optical peak powers of ASE of more than 1 mW and lower temperature optical powers of more than 10 mW up to 250K limited by the employed power supply.
III. Spiral Geometry
As noted previously, it is desirable to increase the length of linear semiconductor cavity 102 for SCSL devices in order to increase ASE intensity. In particular, longer devices are required to generate higher SL power since the maximum attainable SL power increases approximately linearly with an increase in the device length.
In order to address these constraints, Applicants have devised a spiral cavity design in a SCSL device, which provides compactness and therefore enables the fabrication of longer devices without the need for greater chip area.
IV. Spiral Geometry with Tilted Cleaved Facet and Rounded Shaped Wet-Etched Sloped Facet
204(a) shows far-field intensity measurements taken at 80 K of an SCSL device employing a spiral cavity of length 8 mm coupled to RSWESF 104 according to one embodiment. 204(b) shows far-field intensity measurements taken at 80 K of an SCSL device employing a spiral cavity of length 12 mm coupled to RSWESF 104 according to one embodiment. As shown in 204(a) and 204(b), the light emission of both devices exhibit two peaks in the positive angle direction, with a full width at half maximum (“FWHM”) of approximately 15° and approximately 35° for 8 mm and 12 mm devices respectively.
A. Facet Structure and Reflectivities
According to one embodiment RSWESF 104 is additionally coated with 1.2 μm of Si3N4 to further suppress the optical feedback from RSWESF 104. The reflectivity of such a facet with the AR coating is experimentally determined to be approximately 10−5. A 17° angled ridge waveguide serves to suppress the residual reflection from the front facets and according to one embodiment, achieves a reflectivity of approximately 10−2.
B. QC Structure and Fabrication
According to one embodiment a QCSL device employing a spiral cavity coupled to a RSWESF 104 (back facet), and a 17° angled straight section with a TCF 106 (front facet) utilizes an ultra-strong coupling scheme with an emission wavelength of approximately 5 μm at 80 K. According to one embodiment, the devices may be fabricated using standard ridge-laser processing. In particular, according to one embodiment, the waveguides may be patterned by photolithography and wet-etched to approximately 6 μm deep. According to this same embodiment, 1.2 μm of Si3N4 is deposited with PECVD. Contact windows of approximately 18 μm in width are opened at the top of the cavities (excluding the back facet) with photolithography and reactive-ion etching (“RIE”). Contact patterns are again defined by photolithography and Ti/Au top metal contact of 30/300 nm is deposited through electron-beam evaporation from three different angles to ensure coverage on all sidewalls of the spiral shaped cavity. After lift-off, the substrate may be thinned to approximately 200 μm and 20/200 nm of Ge/Au bottom metal contact is deposited through electron-beam evaporation. The devices may then be mounted epitaxial side up to copper heat sinks.
C. Exemplary Dimensions
According to one embodiment, the lengths of the 17° angled straight ridges are may be 950 μm for the 8 mm device and approximately 1325 μm for the 12 mm device. Both of the waveguides may be approximately 25 μm in width and approximately 6 μm in depth, deep enough to expose the active core while maintaining a slope at RSWESF 104 in the active region to reflect incident light into the substrate and to scatter the incident light with its curved wall (not shown in
According to one embodiment, the minimum spiral radius is chosen to be approximately 380 μm for negligible bending losses.
D. Experimental Results
V. Spiral Geometry with Tilted Cleaved Facet and Rounded Shaped Passive Loop Facet
According to one embodiment, in order to minimize the back facet reflectivity without relying on an AR coating, an un-pumped loop back facet dominated by waveguide loss may be used as a back facet. Such a loop back facet may be employed for the purpose of absorption in order to suppress the back facet reflectivity. By replacing AR coated RSWESF 104 of a spiral cavity 206 (described above with reference to
In particular, 208 shows a portion of a QCSL device employing spiral cavity 206 and RSWESF 104 AR coated back facet according to one embodiment.
302 shows a portion of a QCSL device employing spiral cavity 206 and passive loop back facet that does not utilize metal 306 according to one embodiment. In particular referring to 302, 306 is a loop back facet that does not utilize metal. 308 is a Y-splitter where spiral cavity joins loop back facet that does not utilize metal 306.
304 shows a portion of a QCSL device employing spiral cavity 206 and passive loop back facet that does utilize metal 310 according to one embodiment. In particular referring to 304, 310 is a loop back facet that does utilize metal. 308 is a Y-splitter where spiral cavity joins loop back facet that does utilize metal 310.
344 is a plot of far-field measurements taken at 80 K of the 12 mm device 346 and the 16 mm device 348, both taken at subthreshold current in pulsed mode.
A. Facet Structure and Reflectivities
Using the independently measured gain of the QC laser material, the back loop facet, reflectivities of the cavity and facet designs shown in
B. QC Structure and Fabrication
According to one embodiment, the QC structure and fabrication process utilized a scheme similar to that described above with respect to the spiral cavity design employing a RSWESF rather than a passive loop back facet.
C. Experimental Results
Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been described using specific terms, such description is for illustrative purposes only, and it is to be understood that changes and variations may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the following claims.
This application is based on, and claims priority to, U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/093,637, filed Dec. 18, 2014, the entire contents of which being fully incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under MIRTHE (NSF-ERC) (ECC #0540832) and NDSEG Fellowship (32 CFR 168 a). The U.S. government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62093637 | Dec 2014 | US |