Title :
Internal thermoelectric heating and cooling in heterostructure diode lasers
Author :
Pipe, K.P. ; Ram, R.J. ; Shakouri, A.
Author_Institution :
Res. Lab. of Electron., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Pulsed electrical injection of a semiconductor laser typically results in better performance compared with continuous wave operation. Pulsed lasers tend to have lower threshold current, higher quantum efficiency, more stable performance over varying ambient temperature, and the ability to operate at longer wavelengths. This dramatic difference in performance underscores the importance of heat generation and transport in semiconductor lasers. We develop here a new heat model for a semiconductor device that takes into account more rigorously the thermoelectric properties of the constituent layers. We apply the concept of heterostructure integrated cooling to a SCH quantum well laser. Peltier cooling can be optimized in a device by engineering the band offsets in such a way that current both into and out of the active region removes heat from the lattice. We call this device an ICICLE (injection current internally cooled light emitter).
Keywords :
Peltier effect; laser theory; quantum well lasers; semiconductor device models; ICICLE; Peltier cooling; SCH quantum well laser; active region; band offset engineering; constituent layers; heat generation; heat model; heterostructure diode lasers; heterostructure integrated cooling; higher quantum efficiency; injection current internally cooled light emitter; internal thermoelectric heating; longer wavelengths; lower threshold current; more stable performance; pulsed electrical injection; thermoelectric properties; varying ambient temperature; Cooling; Heating; Laser modes; Laser stability; Optical pulses; Quantum well lasers; Semiconductor lasers; Temperature; Thermoelectricity; Threshold current;
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics, 2001. CLEO '01. Technical Digest. Summaries of papers presented at the Conference on
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN :
1-55752-662-1
DOI :
10.1109/CLEO.2001.947395