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Cavity length effects on internal loss and quantum efficiency of multiquantum-well lasers

61

Citations

14

References

1999

Year

Abstract

We investigate loss mechanisms in 1.55-/spl mu/m InGaAsP-InP multiquantum-well ridge-waveguide laser diodes at room temperature. The common method of measuring light versus current curves and plotting the inverse slope efficiency versus laser length is employed to extract the internal optical loss /spl alpha//sub i/ and the differential internal efficiency /spl eta/. This method neglects the dependence of both the parameters on the laser cavity length L. We analyze physical mechanisms behind these loss parameters and their length dependence using the commercial laser simulation software PICS3D. Internal optical losses are dominated by carrier density dependent absorption. The differential internal efficiency above threshold is found to be mainly restricted by carrier recombination losses within the quantum wells, i.e., Fermi level pinning is not observed. Both loss mechanisms are enhanced with shorter cavity length due to the higher quantum well carrier density. For the shortest device measured (L=269 /spl mu/m), we extract /spl alpha//sub i/=20 cm/sup -1/ and /spl eta//sub i/=66%. With increasing cavity length, the loss parameters approach /spl alpha//sub i/=15 cm/sup -1/ and /spl eta//sub i/=70%. From the inverse slope efficiency versus cavity length plot, we obtain /spl alpha//sub i/=14 cm/sup -1/ and /spl eta//sub i/=67% independent of laser length.

References

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