Presstime Bulletin | July 2007
A Laser Cavity Close to the Size of the Diffraction Limit
Researchers
in Japan have developed a laser that operates at room temperature and measures
only about 9 × 15 μm.
Toshihiko Baba and his colleagues Kengo Nozaki and
Shota Kita at Yokohama National University constructed the device by drilling an
array of holes in a slab of gallium indium arsenide phosphate using electron
beam lithography. The wafer had a photoluminescence peak of 1.55 μm. Unlike with
typical quantum-well wafers fabricated in this manner, the investigators offset
two of the holes near the center of the slab (see figure). With this intentional
“defect,” the array enabled the device to exclude most wavelengths that might
pass through the device.
Courtesy of Yokohama National University, Japan.
They pumped the wafer with a 0.98-μm CW laser with a spot diameter of 2.5
μm. They observed that the device could generate CW beams in either of two
different designs. At an effective pump power of 1.2 μW, the device reached a
40-dB peak over background and a resolution-limit spectral width of 0.06 nm,
providing a Q of 20,000 in the first design; and, at 2.4 μW, a 25-dB peak, a
spectral width of 1.0 nm and a Q of 1500 in the second design with a
near-thresholdless operation. The entire device’s ability to use a pump
operating at 1.2 μW ensures that it can operate at room temperature with no
external cooling.
Time-domain measurements made using a photomultiplier
tube from Hamamatsu showed that the laser’s spontaneous emissions were enhanced
by the Purcell effect.
The device ultimately may find use in
subminiaturized optical communications systems or as single-photon emitters. The
researchers report their findings in the June 11 issue of
Optics
Express.
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