The present invention relates to a tunable light source, and more particularly to a tunable wavelength laser diode (TLD) in which an oscillation wavelength can be adjusted (tuned) in a wide wavelength range.
Since a tunable laser is used in a wide range of applications such as carrier wave light sources for optical communication, gas sensing, and machining, its required characteristics also vary, but wideness of a wavelength range that can be covered by one light source is important. Here, the meaning of the wideness of a wavelength range in gas sensing using a tunable laser will be described.
In gas sensing using a tunable laser, utilizing the fact that a gas serving as a target has a light absorption spectrum specific to the gas, the presence or absence (a concentration), a temperature, and a pressure of the gas can be measured from a spectrum of reflected or transmitted light.
That is, by continuously performing wavelength sweeping of laser light emitted from a tunable laser, a state of a gas is detected from a light absorption intensity in the vicinity of a specific wavelength and a spectral width of an absorption curve.
By acquiring a plurality of absorption lines at once with one wavelength sweep, more information can be obtained from a target, and thus the wideness of a wavelength range that can be covered by a tunable laser directly leads to higher functionality of a sensing device thereof.
Although a method of mounting a plurality of tunable lasers having different wavelength bands on a sensing device is also conceivable, considering the costs of optical components for combining light rays emitted from different tunable lasers on the same optical path and the complexity of a control circuit for controlling a plurality of different tunable lasers, there is preferably only one laser that performs the wavelength sweep.
For example, in NPL 1 below, a distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) laser that has an oscillation wavelength of a 2 μm band using an InP-based semiconductor for CO2 gas sensing is reported.
In a structure of the DBR laser in NPL 1, a bulk (generally indicating a layer thickness of several hundred nm or more) InGaAs (indium gallium arsenide) compound semiconductor material that is lattice-matched with InP (indium phosphide) is used in a DBR region and a phase adjustment (PH) region (collectively called a tuning region), and by injecting a current into the tuning region, a refractive index of the bulk InGaAs is changed to variably control the oscillation wavelength of the DBR laser.
Further, in the structure in NPL 1, a structure called a strained InGaAs/InGaAs multiple quantum well (strained MQW), in which a compound semiconductor having a multilayer structure constituting a multiple quantum well (MQW), for example, InGaAs material is distorted by periodically applying compression or elongation strain in an in-plane direction of layers in a thickness direction of the multilayer structure at a thickness equal to or less than a critical film thickness of the material, is used as an optically active semiconductor material (ACT) for laser oscillation.
A strained MQW is a method of realizing a structure that can be macroscopically regarded as a lattice matching system by periodically applying strain in opposite directions to each layer in a multilayer structure constituting an MQW at a film thickness equal to or less than a critical thickness, and in NPL 1, a tunable laser of a 2 μm band within which it is usually difficult to make InP-based semiconductors emit light (InP-based semiconductors generally have a longest light emission wavelength of about 1.65 μm) is realized.
[NPL 1] Y. Ueda, et al., “2-μm band active distributed Bragg reflector laser for CO2 gas sensing”, Appl. Phys. Express, 12, 092011 (2019)
The importance of the wideness of a wavelength range that can be covered by a tunable laser is as described above.
Here, in order to widen a wavelength range of a current injection type semiconductor tunable laser (in order to improve tuning efficiency), it is necessary to increase an amount of change in a refractive index due to carrier injection. It can be said that two main physical phenomena occur in a case in which a refractive index is changed by carrier injection into a semiconductor.
The first is a so-called carrier plasma effect in which a group of injected free carriers (plasma) is vibrated by an optical electric field, which conversely acts on an electric field, and as a result, a permittivity and a refractive index are changed, and a change in the refractive index is proportional to a free carrier density in a material.
The second is a phenomenon called a band filling effect, which is explained in relation to light absorption derived from a band gap of a semiconductor.
That is, it is an effect obtained by a light absorption spectrum being shifted to a higher energy side due to a conduction band being filled with electrons, or a valence band being filled with holes at an electron energy level in a semiconductor due to free carriers. This means that due to the Kramers-Kronig relationship, a refractive index spectrum of a material changes as an absorption spectrum changes.
In general, a larger band filling effect is obtained when the photon energy of light having an oscillation wavelength (about 0.62 eV in the case of a 2 μm band) is closer to the band gap energy of a semiconductor that causes a change in the refractive index due to current injection (in the case of InGaAs in a system lattice matching with InP described above, approximately 0.73 eV). That is, in a 2 μm DBR laser, the bandgap energy in a tuning region is preferably close to 0.62 eV within a range in which light absorption can be reduced to a low level.
However, in the sphere of Ga, As, and P-based mixed crystals, which are regarded as familiar materials from an engineering perspective, among compound semiconductors lattice-matched to InP, those having a smaller bandgap energy than InGaAs are not known.
This means that it is difficult to improve the tuning efficiency in the range of materials that are lattice-matched to InP.
The present invention is proposed to solve these problems. That is, it is an object of the present invention to provide a tunable laser having a higher tuning efficiency than a conventional one in a semiconductor laser having a long wavelength in consideration of a normal compound semiconductor, for example, an InP semiconductor, such as a 2 μm band TLD (a tunable laser).
As described above, an optically active material having a long light emission wavelength (small bandgap energy) is obtained due to a strained MQW structure. In order to overcome the above problems, the present invention uses a material having a reduced bandgap energy in a tuning region of a tunable laser.
An example of an embodiment of the present invention is characterized by having the following configurations in order to achieve such an object.
A tunable laser including a compound semiconductor substrate, a gain waveguide composed of an optically active semiconductor material integrated on the compound semiconductor substrate, and a tunable wavelength filter for selecting light of a specific wavelength using current injection integrated on the compound semiconductor substrate, in which at least one or more of the tunable wavelength filters are formed to select a specific wavelength of light from the light from the gain waveguide and return the selected specific wavelength of light back to the gain waveguide, and a semiconductor mixed crystal material constituting the tunable wavelength filter has a strained multiple quantum well structure in which a mixed crystal material ratio changes periodically.
In the tunable laser according to Configuration 1, a peak wavelength of photoluminescence light emission of the semiconductor material constituting the gain waveguide is longer than 1.65 μm.
In the tunable laser according to Configuration 2, a semiconductor material constituting the gain waveguide has a strained multiple quantum well structure.
In the tunable laser according to any one of Configurations 1 to 3, the peak wavelength of photoluminescence light emission of the strained multiple quantum well structure constituting the tunable wavelength filter is separated from the shortest wavelength among oscillation wavelengths of the tunable laser by 50 nm or more toward a shorter wavelength side.
In the tunable laser according to any one of Configurations 1 to 4, further including one or more phase adjusters for adjusting a resonator length of an optical resonator constituting the tunable laser are provided, wherein a material constituting the phase adjuster has the same strained multiple quantum well structure as the tunable wavelength filter.
In the tunable laser according to any one of Configurations 1 to 5, further including electro-absorption type light intensity modulators monolithically integrated on the compound semiconductor substrate for modulating an intensity of output laser light.
In the tunable laser according to any one of Configurations 1 to 6, wherein the compound semiconductor substrate is an InP substrate, and the strained multiple quantum well structure is a strained InGaAs/InGaAs multiple quantum well.
According to the semiconductor optical element structure of the tunable laser of the present invention described above, it is possible to widen a tunable wavelength range covered by a tunable light source, and it is possible to further widen an application range of the tunable laser.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the figures.
As Example 1 of the present invention, an example of realizing expansion of an oscillation wavelength range of a 2 μm band DBR type semiconductor tunable laser for CO2 gas sensing will be shown.
For example, InP is selected as a compound semiconductor substrate S in
In Example 1, a tunable laser having a longer oscillation wavelength than a normal InP substrate-based semiconductor laser is realized by using the strained MQW structure for the gain waveguide ACT. In the gain waveguide ACT of Example 1 of
In Example 1 of
Here, a case in which the oscillation wavelength of the DBR laser is shifted to a short wavelength side by a maximum of about 10 nm using current injection into the DBR portion is considered. Accordingly, the shortest wavelength lm of the oscillation wavelength of the laser of Example 1 is 2.015 μm.
As the tunable wavelength filter TWF, in addition to a DBR, a ring resonator, a sampling diffraction grating Bragg reflector, or the like can be considered, but as long as it is a tunable wavelength filter TWF that returns light of a specific wavelength to the waveguide ACT due to wavelength selectivity, the configuration is not limited.
Further, in
That is, at least one or more of the tunable wavelength filters TWF may be formed to select a specific wavelength of light from the light from the gain waveguide ACT and return the selected specific wavelength of light back to the gain waveguide ACT.
In the cross-sectional view of the gain waveguide ACT of
Similarly, in the cross-sectional view of the DBR portion and the PH portion of
In each portion, the over-cladding portion OC forms a ridge-type optical waveguide by other portions being removed while leaving an over-cladding layer with a width of about 2 μm along an optical path.
In Example 1, as shown in
In the present specification, a difference between the oscillation wavelength of the laser and the PL peak wavelength of the strained InGaAs/InGaAs multiple quantum well in the tuning region is called detuning. In the present invention, a tunable range of the oscillation wavelength of the laser can be increased by adopting the strained MQW structure in the tuning region and setting an amount of detuning to be small in this way. In a conventional structure described in NPL 1, since a bulk InGaAs material that is lattice-matched with InP was used for the tuning region, the amount of detuning could not be set in this way.
In the strained InGaAs/InGaAs quantum well structure of Example 1, well layers and barrier layers configured in different mixed crystal material ratios are periodically and alternately laminated, and, for example, a thickness/an amount of strain of the well layer and the barrier layer may be set to, for the well layer, 10 nm/a compression of 1.5%, and for the barrier layer, 10 nm/an elongation of 1%. By adjusting the mixed crystal material ratio for each layer, the amount of strain of each layer can be adjusted, and the PL peak wavelength of the strained MQW can be adjusted.
The reason for detuning the PL peak wavelength in the tuning region (the DBR and the PH) to 1.965 μm which is a shorter wavelength by 50 nm or more with respect to the shortest oscillation wavelength lm of the target tunable laser is to avoid a problem in which, in using a band filling effect, when the PL wavelength in the tuning region is too close to the oscillation wavelength of the semiconductor laser, a light loss due to light absorption becomes significant.
Further, in the first embodiment of
In addition, the semiconductor material of the phase adjuster PH is also a strained InGaAs/InGaAs multiple quantum well with a photoluminescence peak wavelength of 1.965 μm, which is the same as the semiconductor material of the DBR region described above.
The same calculation model as in NPL 1 is used for a method for calculating an amount of change in a refractive index with respect to an amount of current injection required for an amount of wavelength shift. When the amount of wavelength shift is estimated from a change in carrier density, a confinement coefficient of a light mode is required, but here, 0.5 was set for bulk InGaAs, and the strained InGaAs/InGaAs MQW was set to 0.25, which is half of that.
As shown in
In Example 1, the amount of detuning of the InGaAs/InGaAs strained quantum well in the tuning region was set to 50 nm in order to achieve the band filling effect. However, in this degree of the amount of detuning, when a modulation signal is applied to the structure of Example 1 together with a bias electric field in an opposite direction (the potential of the over-cladding layer OC of the p-type InP is negative with respect to the n-type InP substrate S), an electro-absorption type light intensity modulation function due to the exciton absorption shift can be obtained.
Accordingly, in Example 2, a modulation electrode that applies a reverse bias together with the modulation signal is added in the structure of the waveguide material that is exactly the same as the tuning region shown in
For example, in sensing applications of the tunable light source, a method for changing not only a wavelength of light but also an intensity of light over time is adopted. The light whose intensity is modulated at a frequency f0 in time is sent to a sensing target, and the light intensity of the received light is synchronously detected at the frequency f0, and thus high S/N sensing can be performed.
In order to modulate the light intensity, a method for changing a light output from a resonator by changing an amount of current to the ACT portion of the tunable light source (direct modulation) can be considered. However, as described in Example 1, when the amount of current to the ACT portion is changed, the resonator length as a resonator will change, and this causes fluctuations in the oscillation wavelength in the tunable light source, and thus it is not suitable for sensing that uses the oscillation wavelength.
Further, it is also possible to modulate the light output by integrating an optical semiconductor amplifier SOA that amplifies the light output with the output of the semiconductor laser and changing the amount of current to the SOA.
However, since this method dynamically modulates the amount of current to the SOA, heat generated from the SOA portion also fluctuates periodically. In a case in which a thermal crosstalk from the SOA to the tunable laser is equal to or more than a certain level, the oscillation wavelength of the tunable laser also fluctuates.
Generally, integrating an electro-absorption type light modulator that generates less heat than an SOA at the output of the tunable light source, is advantageous for realizing a light intensity modulation function while ensuring wavelength controllability.
As described above, in the tunable laser of the present invention, it is possible to improve the tuning efficiency and widen the tunable wavelength range covered with the tunable light source, and further widen the application range of the tunable laser.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2019/049172 | 12/16/2019 | WO |