Source/Type: Company News Releases
Scientists Demonstrate High-Performing Room-Temperature
Nanolaser
June 20,
2007... Honeycomb-like Photonic Crystal helps nanolaser achieve high
efficiency
Washington, D.C.-- Scientists at Yokohama
National University in Japan have built a highly efficient
room-temperature nanometer-scale laser that produces stable,
continuous streams of near-infrared laser light. The overall device
has a width of several microns (millionths of a meter), while the
part of the device that actually produces laser light has dimensions
at the nanometer scale in all directions. The laser uses only a
microwatt of power, one of the smallest operating powers ever
achieved. This nanolaser design should be useful in future
miniaturized circuits containing optical devices. The researchers
present their nanolaser in the latest issue of Optics Express, an
open-access journal published by the Optical Society of America. The
laser is made of a semiconductor material known as gallium indium
arsenide phosphate (GaInAsP). The laser's small size and efficiency
were made possible by employing a design, first demonstrated at the
California Institute of Technology in 1999, known as a
photonic-crystal laser. In this design, researchers drill a
repeating pattern of holes through the laser material. This pattern
is called a photonic crystal. The researchers deliberately
introduced an irregularity, or defect, into the crystal pattern, for
example by slightly shifting the positions of two holes. Together,
the photonic crystal pattern and the defect prevent light waves of
most colors (frequencies) from existing in the structure, with the
exception of a small band of frequencies that can exist in the
region near the defect.
By operating at room temperature and
in a mode where laser light is emitted continuously, the new
nanolaser from Yokohama National University distinguishes itself
from previous designs. For a laser device that depends on the
delicate effects of quantum mechanics, the random noise associated
with even a moderately warm environment usually overwhelms the
process of producing laser light. Yet this laser operates at room
temperature. It also produces a continuous output of light, rather
than a series of pulses. This desirable continuous operation is more
difficult to achieve because it requires careful management of the
device's power consumption and heat dissipation.
According
to Yokohama researcher Toshihiko Baba, the new nanolaser can be
operated in two modes depending what kind of "Q" value is chosen. Q
refers to quality factor, the ability for an oscillating system to
continue before running out of energy. A common example of an
oscillating system would be a tuning fork. The higher its Q value,
the longer it will ring after being struck. Lasers are oscillating
systems because they produce light waves that repeatedly bounce back
and forth inside the device to build up a beam. Nanolasers operated
in a high-Q mode (20,000) will be useful for optical devices in tiny
chips (optical integrated circuits). In a moderate-Q (1500)
configuration the nanolaser needs only an extremely small amount of
external power to bring the device to the threshold of producing
laser light. In this near-thresholdless operation, the same
technology will permit the emission of very low light levels, even
single photons.
### Article: Kengo Nozaki, Shota Kita,
and Toshihiko Baba, "Room temperature continuous wave operation and
controlled spontaneous emission in ultrasmall photonic crystal
nanolaser," Optics Express, Vol. 15, Issue 12, pp. 7506-7514, full
text available at
http://www.opticsexpress.org/abstract.cfm"id=138211.
About
Optics Express
Optics Express, the leading optics journal,
reports on new developments in all fields of optical science and
technology every two weeks. The journal provides rapid publication
of original, peer-reviewed papers. It is published by the Optical
Society of America and edited by Martijn de Sterke of the University
of Sydney. Optics Express is an open-access journal and is available
at no cost to readers online at www.OpticsExpress.org.
About
OSA
Uniting more than 70,000 professionals from 134
countries, the Optical Society of America (OSA) brings together the
global optics community through its programs and initiatives. Since
1916 OSA has worked to advance the common interests of the field,
providing educational resources to the scientists, engineers and
business leaders who work in the field by promoting the science of
light and the advanced technologies made possible by optics and
photonics. OSA publications, events, technical groups and programs
foster optics knowledge and scientific collaboration among all those
with an interest in optics and photonics. For more information,
visit www.osa.org.
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