Author_Institution :
Electr. Eng. Res. Lab., Illinois Univ., Champaign, IL, USA
Abstract :
Starting in 1962 with GaAs and the alloy GaAsP, the prototype III-V alloy the semiconductor laser developed slowly from a pulse-operated simple p-n junction to a continuously operated (300-K) double heterojunction in 1970. Then, in 1977, in another metamorphosis, it became a quantum-well (QW) device of reduced dimensionality (two dimensional) and improved density of states and performance. The fact that the semiconductor laser is based on an ideal form of “lamp”, a p-n junction of potentially 100% quantum efficiency in conversion of electron-hole pairs to photons, gives it a built-in advantage over all other forms of lasers-all the indirectly excited lasers. Also, being a condensed system, it can be small-smaller than all other forms of lasers-and yet cover a great wavelength and power range, which continue to expand. Because of its third-layer form, a QW heterostructure (the product of more or less easily controlled epitaxial crystal growth) is amenable to modification by relatively simple processing operations such as impurity-induced layer disordering and now “wet” oxidation of Al-based layers, which makes possible a new generation of high-performance vertical-cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELs). The VCSEL, with its oxide-defined high-Q flat cavity, reduced mode density, and approach now to instant “turn-on” (μA currents), indicates that semiconductor lasers may not become much better than VCSELs, even if there is a change (not certain) in form from two to one to zero dimensional (and, if so, to problems in uniformity and reproducibility). If the technologies of the high-brightness transparent-substrate light emitting diode (LED) and the VCSEL converge much more, it is likely that the VCSEL-LED will become an addressable array (a display), a projection television, or a low- or high-power lamp, perhaps eventually on a large “diameter” Si platform. The study of the semiconductor laser, the first practical QW device, is not complete, nor is its development, which is certain to continue
Keywords :
laser cavity resonators; light emitting diodes; optical pumping; p-n junctions; quantum well lasers; semiconductor lasers; surface emitting lasers; 100% quantum efficiency; Al-based layers; GaAs; GaAsP; QW heterostructure; Si; VCSEL; continuously operated double heterojunction; electron-hole pairs; epitaxial crystal growth; high-brightness transparent-substrate light emitting diode; high-performance vertical-cavity surface emitting lasers; improved density of states; impurity-induced layer disordering; indirectly excited lasers; metamorphosis; oxide-defined high-Q flat cavity; power range; pulse-operated simple p-n junction; quantum-well laser device; reduced dimensionality; reduced mode density; semiconductor laser; third-layer form; wavelength range; Gallium arsenide; III-V semiconductor materials; Laser modes; Light emitting diodes; P-n junctions; Prototypes; Semiconductor laser arrays; Semiconductor lasers; Surface emitting lasers; Vertical cavity surface emitting lasers;