Português

Medium-long wavelength infrared quantum cascade laser of MOCVD on silicon

442
2023-08-04 16:26:34
Ver tradução
Us researchers report 8.1 μm wavelength quantum cascade laser (QCL) grown on silicon (Si) by MOCVD [S. Xu et al., Applications. Physics Letters, v123, p031110, 2023]. "There are no previous reports of QCL growth on silicon substrates by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD)," commented the team from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and MicroLink Devices Inc.
 
This integration on silicon could lead to the development of chip scale, reliable and mass-producible photonic integrated circuits (PIC). The researchers contrast this with other integration methods such as wafer bonding: "Hybrid integration methods rely on precise alignment to achieve efficient waveguide to laser optical coupling, which in turn requires tight fabrication machining tolerances. Direct integration onto silicon through heteroepitaxy enables mid-infrared (IR) optoelectronic devices to be integrated with mature CMOS-compatible silicon platforms at low cost and high throughput."
 
Mid-infrared QCL is usually grown on indium phosphide (InP). The team paid particular attention to creating a virtual InP substrate on silicon by combining molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) and MOCVD. MOCVD is superior to MBE in production. "The remaining technical challenge is to overcome the defects and epitaxial growing-related problems caused by large lattice constant and thermal expansion mismatches (e.g., about 8% lattice mismatches) and about 50% thermal expansion coefficient mismatches between InP and primary substrates such as silicon," the researchers comment.
The arsenide portion of the template structure (Figure 1) is a limited company grown on a commercial (001) GaP/Si template (supplied by NAsP III/V) using a solid source MBE. The substrate is nominally coaxial and compatible with high-throughput industrial-scale CMOS electronics production. The initial layer consists of an Indium Gallium Arsenide (InGaAs) dislocation filter layer (DFL) sandwiched in GaAs. By keeping the thickness of the initial arsenide layer at 0.5 μm, the researchers sacrificed some of the potential for reducing the penetration dislocation density (TDD). The GaAs layer grows in two steps, first at low temperatures of 500°C and then at higher temperatures (580/610°C for the lower/upper layers, respectively). As far as the upper layers are concerned, one motivation for doing so is to avoid the escape of indium in InGaAs DFL.
 
The upper InP metaseptic buffer (MBL) portion of the template grows through MOCVD and includes four additional DFLS, consisting of three 2nm/37nm InAs/InP pairs.
 
The QCL is completed using MOCVD and has a total epitaxial thickness (including the metamorphic buffer layer and the laser layer) of approximately 13 μm. QCL/Si did not show cracks, which the team believes could be due to two factors: the small sample size of 1.7cmx1.7cm, and the curvature accumulation mitigated by the 800 μm thick silicon substrate. The TDD for the arsenide portion of the template was estimated to be 1.0 x109 / cm-2. InP MBL reduces this to 7.9x108 /cm 2.
Under pulsed operation, the threshold current density on silicon is 22% lower than that of devices grown on bulk InP substrates during the same process run: in the figure, 1.50kA/cm 2 and 1.92kA /cm 2, respectively. The researchers comment: "This may reflect reduced incorporation of silicon dopants within the active nuclear superlattices due to pre-existing defects or differences in the growth temperatures of the silicon and InP substrate surfaces. In addition, uneven growth around the defect site may reduce carrier mobility and tunneling efficiency, which would explain the higher series resistance observed in devices grown on silicon."
 
The higher the voltage required to provide a given current injection in a silicon-based QCL, the higher the series resistance. Despite the higher series resistance, silicon-based QCL also provides higher peak optical output power: 1.64W for silicon-based devices and 1.47W for INP-based devices. The corresponding slope efficiency is 0.72W/A and 0.65W/A, and the electro-optical conversion efficiency is 2.85% and 2.50%, respectively.
 
The emission spectral analysis showed a variety of modes in the wavelength range 7.6-8.3 μm. The maximum peak values of InP and Si based devices are about 8.1 μm and 8.0 μm, respectively. These wavelengths are slightly shorter than the design target of 8.2 μm. The researchers believe that this difference may be due to local growth changes affecting layer thickness, as shown in X-ray diffraction analysis.
 
Source: Laser Network
Recomendações relacionadas
  • New photonic nanocavities open up new fields of optical confinement

    In a significant leap in quantum nanophotonics, a team of European and Israeli physicists introduced a new type of polarized cavity and redefined the limits of light confinement. This groundbreaking work was detailed in a study published yesterday in Natural Materials, showcasing an unconventional photon confinement method that overcomes the traditional limitations of nanophotonics.For a long time...

    2024-02-12
    Ver tradução
  • The research team from the School of Engineering at Columbia University in the United States has broken through the "bandwidth bottleneck" of high-performance computing in new photonic chips

    When running various artificial intelligence programs such as large language models, although data centers and high-performance computers are not limited by the computing power of their individual nodes, the amount of data transmitted between nodes is currently the root cause of the limitations on the performance and bandwidth transmission of these systems.Because some nodes in the system are more...

    2023-10-31
    Ver tradução
  • Scientists are using lasers to create lunar paving blocks

    Original Hal Bowman 9000 Scientific RazorThe 3 kW laser power output on a 45 mm laser spot consolidates the interlocking structure within the EAC-1A powder bed. Source: Jens Kinst, BAMBy using lasers to melt lunar soil into stronger layered materials, it is possible to build paved roads and landing pads on the moon, according to a concept validation study in a scientific report. Although these exp...

    2023-10-14
    Ver tradução
  • Mazak will showcase high-speed fiber lasers on Tube 2024

    Yamazaki Mazak designed the FT-150 fiber laser tube processing machine for high-speed cutting of small and medium-sized diameter pipes, for use in Tube 2024. The machine tool will be controlled by a new type of pipe cutting CNC, which will be exhibited for the first time in Europe.Tube 2024 will be held from April 15th to 19th in Dusseldorf, Germany. Mazak will be exhibited at booth C17 in Hall 5....

    2024-03-16
    Ver tradução
  • Natural Communication: Oxide Dispersion Enhancement for High Performance 3D Printing of Pure Copper

    The laser additive manufacturing technology of pure copper (Cu) with complex geometric shapes has opened up vast opportunities for the development of microelectronic and telecommunications functional devices. However, laser forming of high-density pure copper remains a challenge.Recently, the forefront of additive manufacturing technology has noticed a joint report by the University of Hong Kong, ...

    04-11
    Ver tradução