Journal Article10.1515/nanoph-2023-0687
Modeling with graded interfaces: Tool for understanding and designing record-high power and efficiency mid-infrared quantum cascade lasers
S. Suri,B. Knipfer,Thomas Grange,Huilong Gao,Jeremy Kirch,L. Mawst,R. Marsland,Dan Botez +7 more
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TL;DR: Modeling with graded interfaces accurately reproduces the electro-optical characteristics of record-high power and efficiency mid-infrared quantum cascade lasers. The model is employed to design an 8.1 µm-emitting QCL with suppressed carrier leakage, reaching a maximum front-facet wall-plug efficiency value of 22.2%.
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Abstract: Abstract By employing a graded-interfaces model based on a generalized formalism for interface-roughness (IFR) scattering that was modified for mid-infrared emitting quantum cascade lasers (QCLs), we have accurately reproduced the electro-optical characteristics of published record-performance 4.9 µm- and 8.3 µm-emitting QCLs. The IFR-scattering parameters at various interfaces were obtained from measured values and trends found via atom-probe tomography analysis of one of our 4.6 μm-emitting QCL structures with variable barrier heights. Those values and trends, when used for designing a graded-interface, 4.6 μm-emitting QCL, led to experimental device characteristics in very good agreement with calculated ones. We find that the published record-high performance values are mainly due to both injection from a prior-stage low-energy (active-region) state directly into the upper-laser (ul) level, thus at low field-strength values, as well as to strong photon-induced carrier transport. However, the normalized leakage-current density J leak /J is found to be quite high: 26–28 % and 23.3 %, respectively, mainly because of IFR-triggered shunt-type leakage through high-energy active-region states, in the presence of high average electron temperatures in the ul laser level and an energy state adjacent to it: 1060 K and 466 K for 4.9 µm- and 8.3 µm-emitting QCLs, respectively. Then, modeling with graded interfaces becomes a tool for designing devices of performances superior to the best reported to date, thus closing in on fundamental limits. The model is employed to design a graded-interface 8.1 µm-emitting QCL with suppressed carrier leakage via conduction-band engineering, which reaches a maximum front-facet wall-plug efficiency value of 22.2 %, significantly higher than the current record (17 %); thus, a value close to the fundamental front-facet, upper limit (i.e., 25 %) for ∼8 µm-emitting QCLs.
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References
Room temperature quantum cascade lasers with 27% wall plug efficiency
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate InP-based quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) emitting around 4.9μm with 27% and 21% wall plug efficiencies in room temperature (298 K) pulsed and continuous wave (cw) operations, respectively.
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3 W Continuous-Wave Room Temperature Single-Facet Emission From Quantum Cascade Lasers Based On Nonresonant Extraction Design Approach
Arkadiy Lyakh,Richard Maulini,Alexei Tsekoun,Rowel Go,Christian Pflügl,Laurent Diehl,Qi Jie Wang,Federico Capasso,C. Kumar N. Patel +8 more
TL;DR: A strain-balanced, InP-based quantum cascade laser structure, designed for light emission at 4.6μm using a new nonresonant extraction design approach, was grown by molecular beam epitaxy as discussed by the authors.
Intersubband linewidths in quantum cascade laser designs
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a model to calculate the temperature and field dependent inter-subband linewidth of the optical transition in quantum cascade laser designs, which includes interface roughness scattering based on the approach of Tsujino et al. [Appl. Phys. Lett. 86, 062113].
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Temperature dependence of the key electro-optical characteristics for midinfrared emitting quantum cascade lasers
TL;DR: In this article, the equations for threshold-current density Jth, differential quantum efficiency ηd, and maximum wallplug efficiency (WME) for quantum-cascade lasers (QCLs) are modified for electron leakage and backfilling.
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Electrically tunable, high performance quantum cascade laser
TL;DR: In this article, a quantum cascade laser design for wide voltage-tuning, emitting at ∼8.5μm, is presented based on a diagonal bound-to-continuum design.
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