Article

Rebalancing of internally generated carriers for mid-infrared interband cascade lasers with very low power consumption.

Optical Sciences Division, Naval Research Laboratory, 4555 Overlook Avenue SW, Washington DC 20375, USA.
Nature Communications (impact factor: 7.4). 01/2011; 2:585. DOI:10.1038/ncomms1595 pp.585
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT The interband cascade laser differs from any other class of semiconductor laser, conventional or cascaded, in that most of the carriers producing population inversion are generated internally, at semimetallic interfaces within each stage of the active region. Here we present simulations demonstrating that all previous interband cascade laser performance has suffered from a significant imbalance of electron and hole densities in the active wells. We further confirm experimentally that correcting this imbalance with relatively heavy n-type doping in the electron injectors substantially reduces the threshold current and power densities relative to all earlier devices. At room temperature, the redesigned devices require nearly two orders of magnitude less input power to operate in continuous-wave mode than the quantum cascade laser. The interband cascade laser is consequently the most attractive option for gas sensing and other spectroscopic applications requiring low output power and minimum heat dissipation at wavelengths extending from 3 μm to beyond 6 μm.

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Keywords

active region
 
active wells
 
attractive option
 
cascaded
 
continuous-wave mode
 
electron injectors
 
experimentally that correcting
 
hole densities
 
input power
 
interband cascade laser
 
low output power
 
minimum heat dissipation
 
power densities
 
previous interband cascade laser performance
 
quantum cascade laser
 
redesigned devices
 
room temperature
 
spectroscopic applications
 
two orders