| United States Patent |
5,923,688
|
|
Nakamura
|
July 13, 1999
|
Semiconductor laser
Abstract
A semiconductor laser is herein disclosed which comprises an active layer
21 and SCH layers which sandwich the active layer 21 from upper and lower
sides, wherein the SCH layer comprises a multi-layer structure of 2 or
more layers 22,24,23,25, and this multi-layer structure is constituted so
that the band gaps of the respective layers may increase as the
multi-layer structure is apart from the active layer.
| Inventors:
|
Nakamura; Takahiro (Tokyo, JP)
|
| Assignee:
|
NEC Corporation (Tokyo, JP)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
921164 |
| Filed:
|
August 29, 1997 |
Foreign Application Priority Data
| Current U.S. Class: |
372/45; 372/46 |
| Intern'l Class: |
H01S 003/19 |
| Field of Search: |
372/45,46
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 5509026 | Apr., 1996 | Sasaki et al. | 372/45.
|
| 5753933 | May., 1998 | Morimoto | 372/46.
|
| Foreign Patent Documents |
| 5-110193 | Apr., 1993 | JP.
| |
| 6-77592 | Mar., 1994 | JP.
| |
| 6-268315 | Sep., 1994 | JP.
| |
| 7-221395 | Aug., 1995 | JP.
| |
| 7-263804 | Oct., 1995 | JP.
| |
| 9-260766 | Oct., 1997 | JP.
| |
Other References
Yamashita, S. et al., "Low-Threshold (3.2 mA per Element) 1.3 .beta.m
InGaAsP MQW Laser Array on a p-Type Substrate", IEEE Photonics Technology
Letters, vol. 4, No. 9, Sep. 1992, pp. 954-957.
|
Primary Examiner: Bovernick; Rodney
Assistant Examiner: Song; Yisun
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Foley, Hoag & Eliot LLP
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A semiconductor laser which comprises an active layer, and a p-type SCH
layer and an n-type SCH layer which sandwich the active layer from upper
and lower sides, wherein the n-type SCH layer comprises a multi-layer
structure of 2 or more layers, and this multi-layer structure is
constituted so that the band gaps of the respective layers may increase as
the multi-layer structure is apart from the active layer, wherein an
energy of a bottom of a conduction band of one of the n-type SCH layers is
higher than a quasi Fermi level of electrons at room temperature and lower
than a quasi Fermi level of the electrons at a high temperature.
2. The semiconductor laser according to claim 1 wherein the p-type SCH
layer comprises a multi-layer structure of 2 or more layers, and this
multi-layer structure is constituted so that the band gaps of the
respective layers may increase as the multi-layer structure is apart from
the active layer.
3. The semiconductor laser according to claim 1 wherein each thickness of
the p-type SCH layer and the n-type SCH layer which sandwich the active
layer from upper and lower sides is in the range of 10 to 60 nm.
4. The semiconductor laser according to claim 1 wherein the active layer
has a multi-quantum well structure or a strained quantum well structure.
5. The semiconductor laser according to claim 1 wherein the one of the
n-type SCH layers is second from the active layer and wherein the energy
of the bottom of the conduction band is lower than a quasi Fermi level of
the electrons at 85.degree. C.
6. A semiconductor laser, comprising:
(a) an active layer;
(b) an n-type SCH layer disposed on a first side of the active layer; and
(c) a p-type SCH layer disposed on a second side of the active layer
opposite to the first side, wherein one of the SCH layers includes at
least a first layer and a second layer, the first layer being between the
second layer and the active layer and having a bandgap less than a bandgap
of the second layer, wherein an energy of a bottom of a conduction band of
one of the SCH layers is higher than a quasi Fermi level of electrons at
room temperature and lower than a quasi Fermi level of the electrons at a
high temperature.
7. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 6, wherein the first and
second layers are part of the n-type SCH layer.
8. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 7, wherein the p-type SCH
layer includes at least a third layer and a fourth layer, the third layer
being between the fourth layer and the active layer and having a bandgap
less than a bandgap of the fourth layer.
9. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 6, wherein the first and
second layers are part of the p-type SCH layer.
10. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 9, wherein the n-type SCH
layer includes at least a third layer and a fourth layer, the third layer
being between the fourth layer and the active layer and having a bandgap
less than a bandgap of the fourth layer.
11. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 6, wherein the first layer
has a thickness between 10 nm and 60 nm.
12. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 11, wherein the first layer
has a thickness between 10 nm and 40 nm.
13. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 6, wherein the active layer
is one of: a multi-quantum well structure and a strained quantum well
structure.
14. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 6, wherein the second layer
has an energy of a bottom of a conduction band that is higher than a quasi
Fermi level of electrons at room temperature and lower than a quasi Fermi
level of the electrons at 85.degree. C.
15. A semiconductor laser, comprising:
(a) an active layer;
(b) an n-type SCH layer disposed on a first side of the active layer;
(c) a p-type SCH layer disposed on a second side of the active layer
opposite to the first side; and
(d) means for maintaining in the laser a relatively high internal quantum
efficiency and a relatively low internal loss as temperature of the laser
is increased, wherein an energy of a bottom of a conduction band of one of
the SCH layers is higher than a quasi Fermi level of electrons at room
temperature and lower than a quasi Fermi level of the electrons at a high
temperature.
16. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 15, wherein the active layer
is one of: a multi-quantum well structure and a strained quantum well
structure.
17. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 15, wherein the means for
maintaining includes first and second layers that are part of at least one
of the SCH layers, the first layer being between the active layer and the
second layer and having a bandgap that is less than a bandgap of the
second layer.
18. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 17, wherein the second layer
has an energy of a bottom of a conduction band that is higher than a quasi
Fermi level of electrons at room temperature and lower than a quasi Fermi
level of the electrons at 85.degree. C.
19. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 17, wherein the first layer
has a thickness between 10 nm and 60 nm.
20. A semiconductor laser, according to claim 19, wherein the first layer
has a thickness between 10 nm and 40 nm.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
(i) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a semiconductor laser, and more
specifically, it relates to a semiconductor laser for use in an optical
communication system.
(ii) Description of the Prior Art
With the progress of an optical communication technique, an applicable
field of a semiconductor laser is rapidly spreading from a trunk
transmission network to systems such as a subscriber system, LAN and data
link. Particularly, in order to realize a total optical communication of
from a communication center to each home, much attention has been paid to
a passive double star (PDS), a passive optical network (PON) and the like
where an original signal is distributed by an optical star coupler which
is a passive part, for the reason why they are inexpensive. In these
systems, a laser has been desired by which a high output operation can be
carried out at a low drive current at a high temperature and a loss by the
distribution of the original signal can be compensated. Therefore, there
has been employed a method which comprises introducing a strained MQW
structure into an active layer to change a band structure and to thereby
increase a gain.
FIG. 6 shows a band structure of an active layer which is constituted of a
strained MQW layer 4 comprising a well layer 11 and a barrier layer 12
formed by MOVPE growth, and a single SCH layer 5 having the same
composition as in the barrier layer 12 (IEEE Photonics Technology Letters,
Vol. 4, No. 9, September 1992, p. 954-957). In order to operate this
semiconductor layer at a high temperature at a high output, it is
necessary to increase an amount of light (an optical confinement
coefficient) which is confined in the well layer, and so the thickness of
an SCH (a separate confinement heterostructure) layer 5 is as thick as 100
nm. However, if the SCH layer is thick, there occur the deterioration of a
carrier transportation efficiency by the recombination of carriers running
through the SCH layer and the increase of an optical loss by free carrier
plasma oscillation, so that the efficiency of the semiconductor laser
deteriorates inconveniently.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In order to efficiently operate the above semiconductor laser under a
high-temperature environment, it is necessary to control an internal loss
by the increase of carriers in an active layer and the reduction of an
internal quantum efficiency by the overflow of the carriers from the
active layer. An object of the present invention is to provide a
semiconductor laser for optical communication by which the above problems
can be solved and in which a highly efficient operation is possible at a
high temperature.
The slope efficiency of the laser depends on the internal quantum
efficiency and the internal loss. As the internal quantum efficiency is
high and the internal loss is low, the laser having the high efficiency
can be obtained. Thus, the influence of a layer thickness and a
temperature on the above two parameters was inspected. The results are
shown in FIG. 3.
For the decrease of the internal loss, at room temperature, it is
advantageous that the layer thickness is small, because the increase of
the internal loss by the deterioration of the carrier transportation
efficiency can be restrained. In the case that the layer thickness is
small, however, the internal loss is remarkably large at the high
temperature ›(b) in FIG. 3!. This phenomenon is considered to be caused by
a fact that the carriers are present at a high concentration in a limited
region, so that a plasma loss becomes remarkable with the rise of the
temperature. On the other hand, with regard to the internal quantum
efficiency, the temperature dependency can be reduced by decreasing the
layer thickness.
The present inventor have intensively investigated in view of the above
experimental results, and as a result, it has been found that the internal
loss at the high temperature can efficiently be reduced, while the
internal quantum efficiency is maintained at a high level, by the use of
an SCH layer in the form of a multi-layer structure. One example of a band
structure in the case that the SCH layer is used in the form of the
multi-layer structure is shown in FIG. 4(c). It is one feature that the
region of the existing carriers is different at room temperature and at
the high temperature.
At room temperature, the carriers are confined in the first SCH layer, and
hence the same state as in the case that the SCH layer is thinned can be
obtained, so that the internal quantum efficiency heightens and the
internal loss decreases. At the time of the high temperature, there can be
attained a constitution where a part of the carriers in the first SCH
layer are released, and therefore the problem of the plasma loss caused by
the carriers present at the high concentration can be solved. Furthermore,
instead of a constitution that the carriers are uniformly distributed in a
wide range as in the case that the layer thickness is increased ›FIG.
4(a)!, most of the carriers are present in the first SCH layer and a part
of the carriers are present in the second SCH layer (the SCH layer at the
second from the active layer) ›the drawing at the high temperature in FIG.
4(c)!. In consequence, the deterioration of the carrier transportation
efficiency which is the problem in the case that the layer thickness is
increased can be restrained, and the deterioration of the internal quantum
efficiency can also be prevented.
As described above, in order to operate the semiconductor laser at a high
output, it is necessary to increase the quantity of the light confined in
the well layer, and the SCH layer must be thickened. The semiconductor
laser of the present invention can restrain the deterioration of the
efficiency of the laser in the case that the SCH is thickened and can
realize the high efficiency in a wide temperature range.
That is to say, the semiconductor laser of the present invention has a
structure by which the increase of the internal loss by the increase of
the carriers in the active layer and the deterioration of the internal
quantum efficiency by the overflow of the carriers from the active layer
can efficiently be restrained, whereby the highly efficient operation at
the high-temperature can be achieved.
The first aspect of the present invention is directed to a semiconductor
laser having such effects which comprises an active layer, and a p-type
SCH layer and an n-type SCH layer which sandwich the active layer from
upper and lower sides, wherein the n-type SCH layer comprises a
multi-layer structure of 2 or more layers, and this multi-layer structure
is constituted so that the band gaps of the respective layers may increase
as the multi-layer structure is apart from the active layer. The second
aspect of the present invention is directed to the semiconductor laser
wherein the p-type SCH layer comprises a multi-layer structure of 2 or
more layers, and this multi-layer structure is constituted so that the
band gaps of the respective layers may increase, as these layers are apart
from the active layer. The third aspect of the present invention is
directed to the semiconductor laser wherein each thickness of the p-type
SCH layer and the n-type SCH layer which sandwich the active layer from
upper and lower sides is in the range of 10 to 60 nm. The fourth aspect of
the present invention is directed to the semiconductor laser wherein the
active layer has a quantum well structure or a strained quantum well
structure. The fifth aspect of the present invention is directed to the
semiconductor laser wherein an energy of a bottom of a conduction band of
the SCH layer comprising a multi-layer structure which is present at the
second from the active layer is higher than a quasi Fermi level of
electrons at room temperature and lower than a quasi Fermi level of the
electrons at 85.degree. C.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows a band structure of a semiconductor laser of the present
invention.
FIG. 2 shows a temperature dependency of an internal quantum efficiency and
an internal loss of the semiconductor laser of the present invention and a
conventional semiconductor laser.
FIG. 3 shows a temperature dependency of an internal quantum efficiency and
an internal loss of a conventional semiconductor laser.
FIG. 4 shows a band structure illustrating a model of carrier accumulation
in a steady state.
FIG. 5 is an illustrative view of a carrier injection state in a two-stage
SCH structure.
FIG. 6 shows a band structure of the conventional semiconductor laser.
FIG. 7 is a sectional view illustrating a fundamental structure of the
semiconductor laser of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
An embodiment of a semiconductor laser of the present invention will be
described with reference to FIG. 7. The semiconductor laser of the present
invention has SCH layers comprising a multi-layer structure. On the
surface and the back surface of a strained multi quantum well active layer
21, first SCH layers 22, 23 are formed, respectively. Furthermore, on the
outsides of the first SCH layers, second SCH layers 24, 25 are formed,
respectively. In addition, on the outsides of the second SCH layers, clad
layers 26, 27 are formed, respectively. In the drawing, an n-type
substrate 28 is used, and an n-type SCH layer and a p-type SCH layer are
formed on the back surface and on the surface of the active layer,
respectively, but a p-type substrate may be used, and the p-type SCH layer
and the n-type SCH layer may be formed on the back surface and on the
surface of the active layer, respectively.
FIG. 1 shows a band structure of the semiconductor laser of the present
invention having the structure shown in FIG. 7. As described above, the
present invention can exert its function by allowing a part of carriers to
flow from the first SCH layer to the second SCH layer at a high
temperature. Therefore, it is preferred that a composition is constituted
(1) so that the band gap of the second SCH layer may be larger than that
of the first SCH layer, and (2) so that an energy of a bottom of a
conduction band of the second SCH layer may be higher than a quasi Fermi
level of electrons at room temperature and may be lower than that of the
electrons at the high temperature.
In the present invention, it is at least necessary that the n-type SCH
layer has the multi-layer structure. Furthermore, the thickness of the
first SCH layer is preferably in the range of 10 to 60 nm, more preferably
10 to 40 nm. The reason why the layer thickness is preferably 10 nm or
more is as follows. FIG. 5 is an illustrative view of a carrier injection
state to the strained MQW layer 1 and the SCH layers in the case that the
SCH layers each has a two-stage structure. In the first and second SCH
layers, three-dimensional levels are present, respectively, and the first
and second SCH layers have energy distributions 16, 17 shown in the
drawing, respectively. The carriers are injected from a three-dimensional
level 14 of the second SCH layer 3 to a three-dimensional level 13 of the
first SCH layer 2, while they are cooled. In succession, the carriers are
injected from this three-dimensional level 13 to a laser wave oscillation
base level 15, while phonons are released. Therefore, when the second SCH
layer 3 is sufficiently distant from the first SCH layer 2 so as to cool
the carriers, the injection efficiency of the carriers of from the second
SCH layer 3 to the first SCH layer 2 can be enhanced. Thus, it is
effective for efficiency improvement at the high temperature that the
thickness of the first SCH layer 2 is 10 nm or more. In addition, it is
also effective that the thickness of the first SCH layer 2 is 60 nm or
less, because the increase of the internal loss caused by the
deterioration of the carrier transportation efficiency can be inhibited.
EXAMPLE 1
FIG. 1 shows a band structure of an MQW (multi quantum well) active layer
of a semiconductor laser according to the present invention. A strained
multi quantum well active layer 21 comprises a compressive strained
InGaAsP having 7 well layers (a well layer 11 is 0.7% compressive strained
InGaAsP and has a thickness of 5 nm, and a barrier layer 12 is 1.13 .mu.m
bandgap composition InGaAsP and has a thickness of 10 nm and a
light-emitting wavelength of 1.3 .mu.m). On both the surfaces of the MQW
layer 21, there were formed first SCH layers 22, 23 (1.13 .mu.m bandgap
composition InGaAsP, thickness=20 nm) and second SCH layers 24, 25 (1.05
.mu.m bandgap composition InGaAsP, thickness=40 nm), respectively. This
active layer is used as a planer type buried laser. The measured results
of a temperature dependency of an internal quantum efficiency and an
internal loss are shown in FIG. 2 ›(c) in FIG. 2!. For comparison, the
evaluation results of lasers comprising a single SCH layer (1.13 .mu.m
bandgap composition InGaAsP) of the same MQW structure and having a layer
thickness of 60 nm ›(a) in FIG. 2! and a layer thickness of 40 nm ›(b) in
FIG. 2! are also shown together in FIG. 2. It is apparent that in the
laser of the present invention, the internal quantum efficiency is high in
a wide temperature range, and the internal loss at the high temperature is
smaller than the laser having the single SCH layer of 40 nm in thickness.
Next, this laser having the 2-stage SCH structure was evaluated under
conditions that a cavity length is 200 .mu.m, a front facet surface
coating ratio is 30% and a rear facet coating ratio is 90%, and as a
result, it was apparent that at room temperature, a threshold current was
4 mA and a slope efficiency was 0.56 W/A; and at 85.degree. C., the
threshold current was 16 mA, the slope efficiency was 0.4 W/A and an
output was 20 mW or more. On the other hand, the laser having the single
SCH structure of 60 mn in thickness was evaluated under the same
conditions regarding the resonator length and the facet coating ratios,
and as a result, it was apparent that at room temperature, the threshold
current was 5 mA and the slope efficiency was 0.45 W/A; and at 85.degree.
C., the threshold current was 17 mA, the slope efficiency was 0.38 W/A. As
understood from the above, the semiconductor laser of the present
invention is more excellent in the slope efficiency at the high
temperature and room temperature as compared with the conventional case.
The laser of the present invention can be driven with a high efficiency
even at the high temperature.
* * * * *