The present invention relates to a homogenous-beam temperature-stable semiconductor laser, and also to a method of producing a laser of this type.
Semiconductor lasers with a power of greater than 1 watt are generally lasers of the broad stripe type and, depending on the required emission power, may be unitary lasers or lasers arranged in parallel to form arrays. The main drawback of such lasers is that the amplitude distribution of their emitted beam in a plane perpendicular to their emission face is highly divergent (with a divergence of around 15° in a plane parallel to the active layers) and very inhomogeneous. This results in a reduction in the efficiency of coupling to an optical fiber. The cause of this is the existence of parasitic modes in the laser cavity and the presence of “filamentation” defects (the electron current within the semiconductor does not pass through the entire active section of the semiconductor, but through one point in this section).
To improve the homogeneity of the near field of the emission face of such lasers, a monomode narrow stripe laser (acting as a filter), extended by a flared part acting as an amplifier, is integrated on the same chip. Power levels substantially above 1 watt can then be emitted, while maintaining a monomode transverse beam. The known lasers have been produced in the following two configurations. The first consists in etching, in active layers, a narrow monomode stripe with transverse index guiding followed by a flared part, which also has transverse index guiding, where “transverse index guiding” means that the lateral confinement of the optical field is achieved by differentiation of the refractive index between the narrow stripe zone and the zones bordering the stripe. The second configuration also includes a narrow monomode stripe with transverse index guiding, but followed by a flared part with transverse gain guiding. Hitherto, no other configuration has been proposed, as it was considered that only the two aforementioned configurations allow the quality of the laser beam emitted to be easily controlled. However, these known structures are relatively complex to produce and their dissipated heat is not easy to extract.
A semiconductor laser is known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,272,162 that comprises a first part in the form of a narrow stripe and a flared terminal second part. Apart from the fact that this known laser includes, between these two parts, “pumping stripes” separated by high-resistance zones, the narrow stripe is deposited after having etched out the active layers by chemical etching, whereas the flared part is bounded by ion implantation in the zones that border it. This results in a complex, lengthy and expensive fabrication process.
The subject of the present invention is a semiconductor laser, the emitted beam of which has a low divergence, is homogeneous and has a power of greater than about 1 W, while being temperature-stable, which laser is easy to produce, which may have good thermal dissipation and which can be fabricated in groups of several elements on the same substrate.
The semiconductor laser according to the invention is characterized in that its cavity comprises, in an active layer, a first part in the form of a narrow monomode stripe with transverse gain guiding, terminating in a second part flaring out from the first part, also with transverse gain guiding.
The method of the invention is a method of producing a semiconductor laser comprising a first part in the form of a narrow stripe and being extended by a second part flaring out from the first part, characterized in that it comprises the following steps:
The present invention will be more clearly understood on reading the detailed description of one embodiment, given by way of nonlimiting example and illustrated by the appended drawing in which:
The semiconductor laser 1 shown in
According to an alternative embodiment of the invention (not shown), it is possible for the axis of the flared part 8 not to be aligned with respect to the axis of the stripe 7 but to make an angle of a few degrees (in a plane parallel to that of the active layers) so as to reduce the reflectivity of the laser beam exit face.
Corresponding to the diagram of the structure that has just been described,
(A): epitaxial growth of the substrate and of the following layers, as shown in
(B): deposition of an ohmic contact 15 on the layer P3 of the structure 14;
(C): photolithography and etching of the two “Vs” of the deflector 9;
(D): thinning of the substrate (on the opposite side from the layer 15), the overall semiconductor structure now being referenced 14A;
(E): deposition of an ohmic contact 16 on the underside of the substrate;
(F): deposition of a polymer 17 in the trenches of the deflector 9 followed by removal of the surplus, so as to obtain a plane surface coplanar with the upper face of the layer 15;
(G): photolithography on the upper face of the layer 15, then proton implantation (the protons being shown symbolically by a number of spots PR), so as to define the parts 7 and 8. The zone lying beneath the photoresist part 15A remaining after the photolithography (between the two trenches) does not include protons;
(H): deposition of an electrode 18 on the layer 15;
(I): photolithography on the electrode and opening, by chemical etching, of the dicing paths 18A between adjacent unitary lasers or adjacent groups of elementary lasers;
Thus, thanks to the invention, it is possible to produce elementary laser sources or laser sources grouped in arrays, and to fasten them via their upper face (face 18) to an appropriate heat sink. This considerably improves the extraction of heat in operation compared with the sources of the prior art, which can be fixed to a sink only via their base.
According to the exemplary embodiments of the invention, what are obtained are elementary lasers having wavelengths lying between 0.7 and 1.1 μm with quantum wells or boxes (called “Qdots”) on a GaAs substrate, having wavelengths lying between 1.1 and 1.8 μm with quantum wells or Qdots on an InP substrate, wavelengths lying between 2 and 2.5 μm in the case of quantum wells or Qdots on a GaSb substrate, and wavelengths lying between 3 and more than 12 μm with QCL-type laser sources.
In general, for all these exemplary embodiments, the divergence of the emitted beam was of the order of a few degrees and the power of the beam with the stripe around 200 to 300 mW and upon exiting the flared part greater than 10 W.
In one exemplary embodiment, a laser of the type described above, with a total length of 3 mm, was fabricated on a semiconductor structure, emitting at around λ=975 nm. It was provided with a high-reflectivity layer on the rear face and with a low-reflectivity layer on the front face. The exit power of the laser reached 2 W in continuous mode at 20° C. The “chip” formed by this laser had a threshold current of only 263 mA and a good external differential efficiency of 0.72 W/A. Its wall-plug efficiency reached its maximum at 43% at around 1.5 W, this being a good value for a flared semiconductor laser. These good results were maintained between 15 and 25° C. The far field of this laser was measured at about 20 cm from the laser. The emitted beam was very narrow: its width between 1° and 2° at mid-height and between 2° and 5° at 1/e2. The far field profile had a very sharp peak. It is known that the threshold current of semiconductor lasers varies as exp(T/T0). The characteristic temperature T0 of the laser thus produced was measured, and this was 136 K between 20 and 40° C. This high value indicates that the threshold of the laser increases very little with temperature.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04/13742 | Dec 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/57005 | 12/21/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/22/2007 |