Claims
- 1. A method for infrared generation, comprising:
generating a first laser field having a first frequency associated with a first interband transition; generating a second laser field having a second frequency associated with a second interband transition, the generation of the first laser field occurring substantially simultaneously with the generation of the second laser field; and generating a third laser field from the first laser field and the second laser field, the third laser field having a third frequency associated with an intersubband transition, the third frequency substantially equivalent to a difference between the second frequency and the first frequency.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the third laser field comprises generating the third laser field from a nonlinear mixing of the first laser field and the second laser field.
- 3. The method of claim 1, wherein:
the first interband transition corresponds to a first transition from a first ground electron state to a ground hole state; the second interband transition corresponds to a second transition from an excited electron state to the ground hole state; and the intersubband transition corresponds to a third transition from the excited electron state to the ground electron state.
- 4. The method of claim 1, wherein:
generating the first laser field comprises injecting a current through a first waveguide comprising aluminum gallium arsenide; and generating the second laser field comprises injecting the current through a second waveguide comprising gallium arsenide.
- 5. The method of claim 1, wherein:
the first laser field has a first wavelength of approximately 0.7 to two microns; and the second laser has a second wavelength of approximately ten to 100 microns.
- 6. The method of claim 1, further comprising generating the third laser field at a temperature of approximately 295 to 305 degrees Kelvin.
- 7. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the third laser field comprises generating the third laser field at an active region comprising a plurality of quantum wells.
- 8. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the third laser field comprises generating the third laser field at an active region comprising a plurality of quantum dots.
- 9. A device for infrared generation, comprising:
a first waveguide operable to generate a first laser field having a first frequency associated with a first interband transition; a second waveguide coupled to the first waveguide and operable to generate a second laser field having a second frequency associated with a second interband transition, the generation of the first laser field occurring substantially simultaneously with the generation of the second laser field; and an active region coupled to the first waveguide and operable to generate a third laser field from the first laser field and the second laser field, the third laser field having a third frequency associated with an intersubband transition, the third frequency substantially equivalent to a difference between the second frequency and the first frequency.
- 10. The device of claim 9, wherein the active region is operable to generate the third laser field by generating the third laser field from a nonlinear mixing of the first laser field and the second laser field.
- 11. The device of claim 9, wherein:
the first interband transition corresponds to a first transition from a ground electron state to a ground hole state; the second interband transition corresponds to a second transition from an excited electron state to the ground hole state; and the intersubband transition corresponds to a third transition from the excited electron state to the ground electron state.
- 12. The device of claim 9, wherein:
the first waveguide comprises a first waveguide layer comprising aluminum gallium arsenide; and the second waveguide comprises a second waveguide layer comprising gallium arsenide.
- 13. The device of claim 9, wherein:
the first laser field has a first wavelength of approximately 0.7 to two microns; and the second laser has a second wavelength of approximately ten to 100 microns.
- 14. The device of claim 9, wherein the active region is operable to generate the third laser field at a temperature of approximately 295 to 305 degrees Kelvin.
- 15. The device of claim 9, wherein the active region comprises a plurality of quantum wells.
- 16. The device of claim 9, wherein the active region comprises a plurality of quantum dots.
- 17. The device of claim 9, wherein:
the first waveguide comprises a first near-infrared waveguide layer and a second near-infrared waveguide layer; the second waveguide comprises a first middle to far-infrared waveguide layer and a second middle to far-infrared waveguide layer; the first near-infrared waveguide layer is disposed outwardly from the first middle to far-infrared waveguide layer; the active region is disposed outwardly from the first near-infrared waveguide layer; the second near-infrared waveguide layer is disposed outwardly from the active region; and the second middle to far-infrared waveguide layer is disposed outwardly from the second near-infrared waveguide layer.
- 18. A device for infrared generation, comprising:
a first laser field generator operable to generate a first laser field having a first frequency associated with a first interband transition; a second laser field generator disposed outwardly from the first laser field generator and operable to generate a second laser field having a second frequency associated with a second interband transition, the generation of the first laser field occurring substantially simultaneously with the generation of the second laser field; and an overlap region operable to generate a third laser field from the first laser field and the second laser field, the third laser field having a third frequency associated with an intersubband transition, the third frequency substantially equivalent to a difference between the second frequency and the first frequency.
- 19. The device of claim 18, wherein the overlap region is operable to generate the third laser field by generating the third laser field from a nonlinear mixing of the first laser field and the second laser field.
- 20. The device of claim 18, wherein:
the first interband transition corresponds to a first transition from a first ground electron state to a first ground hole state; the second interband transition corresponds to a second transition from a second ground electron state to a second ground hole state; and the intersubband transition corresponds to a third transition from an excited electron state to a ground electron state from a set consisting of the first ground electron state and the second ground electron state.
- 21. The device of claim 18, wherein:
the first laser field generator comprises a first waveguide layer comprising aluminum gallium arsenide; and the second laser field generator comprises a second waveguide layer comprising aluminum gallium arsenide.
- 22. The device of claim 18, wherein:
the first laser field has a first wavelength of approximately 0.7 to two microns; the second laser has a second wavelength of approximately 0.7 to two microns; and the third laser has a third wavelength of approximately ten to 100 microns.
- 23. The device of claim 18, wherein the overlap region is operable to generate the third laser field at a temperature of approximately 295 to 305 degrees Kelvin.
- 24. The device of claim 18, wherein the overlap region comprises a plurality of quantum wells.
- 25. The device of claim 18, wherein the overlap region comprises a plurality of quantum dots.
- 26. A method for infrared generation, comprising:
generating a first laser field by injecting a current through a first waveguide comprising aluminum gallium arsenide, the first laser field having a first frequency associated with a first interband transition corresponding to a first transition from a ground electron state to a ground hole state, the first laser field has a first wavelength of approximately 0.7 to two microns; generating a second laser field by injecting the current through a second waveguide comprising gallium arsenide, the second laser field having a second frequency associated with a second interband transition corresponding to a second transition from an excited electron state to the ground hole state, the second laser has a second wavelength of approximately ten to 100 microns, the generation of the first laser field occurring substantially simultaneously with the generation of the second laser field; and generating a third laser field from a nonlinear mixing of the first laser field and the second laser field at a temperature of approximately 295 to 305 degrees Kelvin, the third laser field having a third frequency associated with an intersubband transition corresponding to a third transition from the excited electron state to the ground electron state, the third frequency substantially equivalent to a difference between the second frequency and the first frequency.
RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/231,487, filed Sep. 8, 2000, entitled “METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR INFRARED GENERATION.”
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60231487 |
Sep 2000 |
US |