The present invention relates to a two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser that is usable in an optical pickup using a spot beam whose size is equal to or smaller than the diffraction limit, a laser-processing apparatus with high energy efficiency or similar devices.
In the field of optical recording devices using a laser beam for recording (writing) information into a record medium and reproducing (or reading) the information from the record medium, reduction of the spot size of the laser beam has been demanded to increase the recording density in the record medium. However, simply converging the laser beam with a focusing lens cannot produce a laser beam with a spot size equal to or smaller than the diffraction limit determined by the wavelength of the laser beam and the numerical aperture of the focusing lens. Accordingly, in recent years, a technique for achieving a spot size smaller the diffraction limit has been studied. This technique is called the “super-resolution” technique.
Non-Patent Document 1 discloses a laser beam suitable for achieving a smaller spot size.
Non-Patent Document 2 discloses a method and device for producing a radially polarized annular laser beam.
In this device, the He—Ne laser 21 generates a linearly polarized laser beam 1 (
The laser beam that has passed through the polarization-converting plate 27 travels through the second focusing lens 28 and other components and reaches the half mirror 31, which reflects a portion of the laser beam toward the aperture 32. The aperture 32 has an annular transparent area 322, which allows the passage of light, and the blocking areas 321 and 323, which block the laser beam outside the transparent area 322. When the laser beam passes through the aperture 32, the beam's cross section becomes annular (
A radially polarized laser beam can be suitably used in the field of metal-working using a laser beam as well as in the super-resolution technique. Non-Patent Document 3 discloses the result of a calculation, which proves that irradiating a metal with a radially polarized laser beam makes the processing rate higher than in the case of using a circularly or linearly polarized laser beam of the same energy level. According to that document, this is because metals have higher energy-absorbing efficiencies for radially polarized light than other kinds of polarized light.
Non-Patent Document 1: S. Quabis et al., “Focusing light to a tighter spot”, Optics Communications, vol. 179, pp. 1-7
Non-Patent Document 2: R. Dorn et al. “Sharper Focus for a Radially Polarized Light Beam”, Physical Review Letters, vol. 91, No. 23, pp. 233901-1-233901-4
Non-Patent Document 3: V. G. Niziev et al., “Influence of beam polarization on laser cutting efficiency”, Journal of Physics D-Applied Physics, vol. 32, No. 13, pp. 1455-1461
However, in the device disclosed in Non-Patent Document 2, the four sectors 271 to 274 of the polarization-converting plate 27 are designed to change the polarizing direction of the laser beam to a common direction within each of the four segments 361 to 364 of the beam's cross section (
Furthermore, the device disclosed in Non-Patent Document 2 uses a complex optical system including a large number of optical components to produce a radially polarized beam from a linearly polarized beam generated by the laser light source. Accordingly, this device is expensive.
Thus, an objective of the present invention is to provide a two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser that can generate a radially polarized laser beam having an annular cross section (i.e. a radially polarized annular laser beam) without using a complex optical system and thus reduce the cost.
To solve the aforementioned problems, a two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser according to the present invention includes:
a) a laser oscillator including an active layer, a two-dimensional photonic crystal located on one side of the active layer, and a pair of electrodes between which the active layer and the two-dimensional photonic crystal are sandwiched, the laser oscillator emitting a circumferentially polarized laser beam with an annular cross section from the two-dimensional photonic crystal when a voltage is applied between the electrodes;
b) a first polarization control element, which is located on an optical path of the laser beam generated by the laser oscillator and functions as a half-wave plate; and
c) a second polarization control element, which is located on the optical path of the laser beam and functions as a half-wave plate, with a fast axis extending at an angle of 45° to that of the first polarization control element.
The first and second polarization control elements may preferably be layered on the active layer and the laser oscillator.
The two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser according to the present invention can produce a radially polarized annular laser beam in which light is radially polarized at any point. Condensing this laser beam can result in a laser beam with a spot size smaller than the diffraction limit. Since the radial polarization is truly realized at any point within the laser beam, the spot size of the laser beam in the present invention can be smaller than that achieved by the device disclosed in Non-Patent Document 2.
The first and second polarization control elements may be layered on the structure including the active layer, two-dimensional photonic crystal and two electrodes. This design enables the radially polarized laser beam to be produced using only a single piece of two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser device. Therefore, it is unnecessary to use complex optical systems for converting the type of polarization, so that the cost can be reduced.
A device for generating a super-resolution laser beam having a diameter equal to or smaller than the diffraction limit can be obtained by combining the two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser according to the present invention with a focusing lens for converging the laser beam generated by the two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser to a diameter equal to or smaller than the diffraction limit. Using this super-resolution laser beam generator as a light source in an optical pickup makes it possible to record information into an optical record medium with high density and reproduce information recorded in a high-density optical record medium.
The two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser according to the present invention may be used as a light source for irradiating a metallic workpiece with light in a laser-processing apparatus. Since the light generated by the present laser is radially polarized, the energy of the laser beam can be efficiently supplied to the metal, so that the metal can be quickly processed (e.g. cut or incused). It should be noted that this laser-processing apparatus does not require the laser beam to be converged to a diameter equal to or smaller than the diffraction limit.
a) and 3(b) are cross-sectional views each showing the state of polarization of a laser beam passing through the device shown in
a) and 4(b) are diagrams each showing the cross-sectional shape and state of polarization of a laser beam in the two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser according to the present invention, and
a) and 7(b) are graphics showing a calculated result of the electromagnetic distribution within the two-dimensional photonic crystal 55 in the surface emitting laser of the present embodiment.
a) and 11(b) are graphics showing a calculated result of the electromagnetic distribution within the crystal in the case where the two-dimensional photonic crystal 55′ shown in
In the two-dimensional photonic crystal surface emitting laser according to the present invention (which is hereinafter simply called the “surface emitting laser”), a two-dimensional photonic crystal is provided on one side of the active layer, and a pair of electrodes are provided so that the active layer and two-dimensional photonic crystal are sandwiched between them. A spacer or similar member may also be provided between the active layer, the two-dimensional photonic crystal and the electrodes.
For the active layer, the one that has been used in conventional Fabry-Perot laser light sources is available. The two-dimensional photonic crystal in the present invention consists of a plate-shaped body material with a periodic arrangement of modified refractive index areas, i.e. the areas whose refractive index differs from that of the body material. The modified refractive index areas should preferably consist of holes since this structure provides a large difference in the refractive index between the body and the modified refractive index area and yet is easy to manufacture. However, it is also possible to create the modified refractive index areas by embedding appropriate members into the body. For example, in the case where the two-dimensional photonic crystal needs to be fused to another layer at a high temperature, the modified refractive index area consisting of an embedded member can be suitably used to prevent the high temperature from deforming the modified refractive index area. The modified refractive index area consisting of an embedded member can also be suitably used if the manufacturing process includes creating the two-dimensional photonic crystal and then epitaxially growing another layer.
The components described thus far (i.e. the active layer, the two-dimensional photonic crystal and the electrodes) constitute a laser oscillator. In this laser oscillator (with no polarization control element), when a voltage is applied between the electrodes, a laser beam is emitted in the direction perpendicular to the two-dimensional photonic crystal. According to the present invention, the laser oscillator is modified so that it will generate a laser beam that has an annular cross section (i.e. the light has no strength at around the center and finite strengths at positions apart from the center) and is polarized in a direction revolving around the center (i.e. in the circumferential direction). This beam is called the “circumferentially directed annular laser beam” in this specification.
To produce a circumferentially directed annular laser beam, it is possible to use a two-dimensional photonic crystal whose structure has a rotational symmetry with respect to an axis perpendicular to the crystal surface. A specific example is a two-dimensional photonic crystal in which circular modified refractive index areas are arranged in a square or triangular lattice pattern. If the center of the modified refractive index area is defined as a lattice point, an oscillation mode of such a two-dimensional photonic crystal creates a standing wave within the two-dimensional photonic crystal, with the electric field vector being anti-symmetrical with respect to all the axes connecting the nearest lattice points and the axes connecting the second-nearest lattice points. At around the center of the two-dimensional photonic crystal, the overlap integral of the standing wave and an external plane wave is zero, whereas the overlap integral of the two waves at positions apart from the center is not zero but has finite values since the extent of the two-dimensional photonic crystal is limited. As a result, the laser beam thereby produced has an annular cross section. The oscillation mode of the two-dimensional photonic crystal is generally created so that the electric field encircles each modified refractive index area, and this electric field is amplified by the aforementioned two-dimensional photonic crystal with a rotational symmetry. As a result, a circumferentially polarized laser beam is generated.
A first polarization control element, which functions as a half-wave plate, and a second polarization control element, which also functions as a half-wave plate and has a fast axis extending at an angle of 45° to that of the first polarization control element, are provided on the optical path of the laser beam generated by the laser oscillator. The phrase “function as a half-wave plate” means that the element can convert the polarizing direction of light passing through it to an axially symmetrical direction with respect to a specific axis (fast axis). Although one or both of the two polarization control elements may be provided separately from the laser oscillator, it is preferable to layer them on the laser oscillator to form an integral unit since this design enables the device to be handled as a single surface emitting laser element.
An operation of the surface emitting laser according to the present invention is hereinafter described. When a voltage is applied between the electrodes, a current is injected into the active layer and light is emitted from this layer. This light forms a standing wave within the two-dimensional photonic crystal and is thereby amplified. As a result, a laser beam is emitted in the direction perpendicular to the surface of the two-dimensional photonic crystal. This laser beam passes through the first and second polarization control elements in this order and is ultimately extracted to the outside.
The state of the laser beam changes as illustrated in
As already explained, when fresh from emission from the two-dimensional photonic crystal, the laser beam has an annular cross section in which the light has no strength at around the center and has finite strengths at positions apart from the center. This cross-sectional shape remains intact even after the laser beam has passed through the first and second polarization control elements.
When fresh from emission from the two-dimensional photonic crystal, the laser beam is polarized in the circumferential direction 441 at any point within its cross section (
Thus, the surface emitting laser according to the present invention can generate a radially polarized annular laser beam (
The radially polarized annular laser beam generated by the surface emitting laser according to the present invention can be converged by a focusing lens to a diameter smaller than the diffraction limit, as described in Non-Patent Document 1.
An embodiment of the surface emitting laser according to the present invention is hereinafter described with reference to
The first polarization control layer 581 and the second polarization control layer 582 are layered on the upper face of the substrate 51. The two polarization control layers 581 and 582 each function as a half-wave plate and are oriented so that the fast axis 591 of the first polarization control layer 581 makes an angle of 45° with the fast axis 592 of the second polarization control layer 582. Such polarization control layers can be made from crystal, mica, or polymers normally used for creating half-wave plates. It is also possible to use a Fresnel rhombohedron made of glass.
The substrate 51, the first polarization control layer 581 and the second polarization control layer 582 shown in
An operation of the surface emitting laser in the present embodiment is hereinafter described. When a voltage is applied between the lower electrode 571 and upper electrode 572 to generate a current between the two electrodes, the electrons and positive holes injected into the device recombine together within the active layer 53 and emit light. Among various components of light generated within the active layer 53, the light having a specific wavelength is strengthened by interference within the two-dimensional photonic crystal 55. Thus, a laser oscillation results.
The laser beam thus generated is emitted from the substrate 51 and enters the first polarization control layer 581 through the window 5721. At this stage, the laser beam has an annular cross section in which the beam strength is zero at the central area and has finite values around this area. The polarization of the laser beam is in the circumferential direction.
The laser beam that has entered the first polarization control layer 581 has its polarizing direction changed to an axially symmetrical direction with respect to the fast axis 591 (451), as shown in
a) and 7(b) show the result of a calculation (by the plane wave expansion method) of the electromagnetic field distribution within the two-dimensional photonic crystal 55 in the surface emitting laser of the present embodiment. Specifically,
A photograph of a cross section of the laser beam generated by the surface emitting laser 50 in the present embodiment was taken, as labeled (a-1) in
To determine the polarizing direction of the laser beams shown in (a-1) and (b-1), these laser beams were passed through a polarization filter A, through which only the vertically polarized component of light (labeled 611) in
The device in the previous embodiment used the two-dimensional photonic crystal 55 consisting of the body material 551 with the holes 552 arranged in a square lattice pattern. However, this is not the only form of the two-dimensional photonic crystal usable in the present invention. For example, the two-dimensional photonic crystal 55′ shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-077469 | Mar 2006 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2007/000267 | 3/20/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/29/2008 |