PHT.301 Physics of Semiconductor Devices | |
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Laser DiodeA laser diode is a Light Emitting Diode (LED) in an optical cavity. The optical cavity consists of two mirrors arranged so that standing waves of light can exist between the mirrors. For the standing waves, there are nodes at the surfaces of the mirrors which leads to the condition that the distance between the mirrors $L$ is an integer times half a wavelength. When the laser diode is turned on, the LED sends out light by spontaneous emission. The photons generated by spontaneous emission travel in random directions with photon energies within a few $k_BT$ of the bandgap energy of the semiconductor. Some of these photons have the right wavelength and direction to enter a cavity mode and start bouncing back and forth between the mirrors. Typically, several cavity modes become occupied with photons and these consequently cause stimulated emission. In stimulated emission, a photon stimulates a electron to fall from the conduction band to the valence band and emit a photon into the same quantum state as the initial photon. Photons in the same quantum state have the same wavelength, the same propagation vector, the same polarization, and the same phase. The rate for stimulated emission depends on the number of photons already in that cavity mode, $$ \Gamma_{i\,\text{stimulated}} = N_{i}\Gamma_{\text{spontaneous}}.$$Here $N_i$ is the number of photons in cavity mode $i$. The inverse of the rate, $1/\Gamma_{\text{stimulated}}$, has units of seconds and is the average time for an electron-hole pair to recombine and produce a photon in the mode $i$. When the current flowing through the diode is low, few photons are generated so the number of photons in each mode is small and the stimulated emission is not much faster than spontaneous emission. As the current increases, the number of photons that enter the cavity modes increase and stimulated emission occurs at a faster rate than spontaneous emission. This is why laser diodes have a threshold current density. There must be enough photons in the optical cavity so that stimulated emission dominates over spontaneous emission. The cavity mode with the most photons in it causes the most stimulated emission and gets the most photons to join this mode. Eventually the light output is predominantly stimulated emission from one cavity mode.
Two common types of laser diodes are the Edge-emitting laser and the Vertically Cavity Surface Emitting Laser (VCSEL). Edge emitting laser Components of a laser pointer This laser pointer is an edge emitting laser.
Vertically Cavity Surface Emitting Laser (VCSEL)
The DBRs are dielectric mirrors that are multilayers of two different semiconductors with different band gaps. The bandgaps of both of these layers is larger than the photon energy of the laser light so that the mirrors are transparent to the laser light. At every interface between the two semiconductors, some of the light is reflected and some is transmitted due to the differences in the indices of refraction of the layers. The thicknesses of the layers are chosen so that the reflections from the interfaces of light with the laser wavelength all add constructively. There are enough layers in the lower Bragg reflector to reflect all of the light. The upper Bragg reflector has fewer layers so that some light escapes vertically. One of the DBRs is p-doped and the other is n-doped. When they are biased, electrons are injected into the conduction band of the undoped active layer and holes are injected into the valence band of the active layer. The active layer semiconductor has a smaller bandgap than the semiconductor layers that make up the mirrors so the electrons and holes get trapped in this thin active layer which is designed to be at a maximum of the light intensity of the optical cavity. The high light intensity promotes stimulated emission as the electrons recombine with the holes. The active layer can be thought of as a quantum well if it is thin enough that the separation in energy levels is comparable to the thermal energy $k_BT$. |