Semiconductor lasers or laser diodes play an important part in our everyday lives by providing cheap and compact-size lasers. They consist of complex multi-layer structures requiring
nanometer
330px, Different lengths as in respect to the molecular scale.
The nanometre (international spelling as used by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures; SI symbol: nm) or nanometer (American and British English spelling differences#-re ...
scale accuracy and an elaborate design. Their theoretical description is important not only from a fundamental point of view, but also in order to generate new and improved designs. It is common to all systems that the laser is an inverted carrier density system. The
carrier
Carrier may refer to:
Entertainment
* ''Carrier'' (album), a 2013 album by The Dodos
* ''Carrier'' (board game), a South Pacific World War II board game
* ''Carrier'' (TV series), a ten-part documentary miniseries that aired on PBS in April 20 ...
inversion results in an
electromagnetic polarization
Polarization or polarisation may refer to:
Mathematics
*Polarization of an Abelian variety, in the mathematics of complex manifolds
*Polarization of an algebraic form, a technique for expressing a homogeneous polynomial in a simpler fashion by ...
which drives an
electric field
An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
. In most cases, the electric field is confined in a
resonator, the properties of which are also important factors for laser performance.
Gain medium

In semiconductor laser theory, the
optical gain is produced in a semiconductor material. The choice of material depends on the desired wavelength and properties such as modulation speed. It may be a bulk semiconductor, but more often a quantum heterostructure. Pumping may be electrically or optically (
disk laser). All these structures can be described in a common framework and in differing levels of complexity and accuracy.
[Chow, W. W.; Koch, S. W. (2011). Semiconductor-Laser fundamentals. Springer. ]
Light is generated in a semiconductor laser by radiative recombination of electrons and holes. In order to generate more light
by
stimulated emission
Stimulated emission is the process by which an incoming photon of a specific frequency can interact with an excited atomic electron (or other excited molecular state), causing it to drop to a lower energy level. The liberated energy transfers to th ...
than is lost by
absorption
Absorption may refer to:
Chemistry and biology
* Absorption (biology), digestion
**Absorption (small intestine)
*Absorption (chemistry), diffusion of particles of gas or liquid into liquid or solid materials
*Absorption (skin), a route by which ...
, the system's population density has to be inverted, see the article on
lasers. A laser is, thus, always a high carrier density system that entails many-body interactions. These cannot be taken into account exactly because of the high number of particles involved. Various approximations can be made:
* Free carrier model: In simple models,
many-particle interactions are often neglected. The carrier plasma is then simply seen as a reservoir which relaxes the carrier distributions. However, the many body interaction is necessary to produce the correct
linewidth. Therefore, at the free carrier level a scattering time has to be introduced phenomenologically, usually extracted from experiment, but will change with carrier density and temperature. Simple models for the gain coefficient are often used to obtain a system of
laser diode rate equations The laser diode rate equations model the electrical and optical performance of a laser diode. This system of ordinary differential equations relates the number or density of photons and charge carriers (electrons) in the device to the injection curr ...
, enabling one to dynamically calculate the time-dependent laser response. An expression for the free-carrier gain is given in the article on
semiconductor optical gain.
* Hartree Fock approximation: To describe an interacting carrier system at any density, the
semiconductor Bloch equations[Lindberg, M.; Koch, S. (1988). "Effective Bloch equations for semiconductors". ''Physical Review B'' 38 (5): 3342–3350. do]
10.1103/PhysRevB.38.3342
/ref>[Haug, H.; Koch, S. W. (2009). ''Quantum Theory of the Optical and Electronic Properties of Semiconductors'' (5th ed.). World Scientific. p. 216. ] (SBEs) may be employed. These may be solved in the Hartree–Fock approximation.[Haug, H.; Schmitt-Rink, S. (1984). "Electron theory of the optical properties of laser-excited semiconductors". ''Progress in Quantum Electronics'' 9 (1): 3–100. do]
10.1016/0079-6727(84)90026-0
/ref> In this case, carrier–carrier interaction leads to renormalisation terms for band structure and electric field. The collision terms, i.e., the terms describing carrier–carrier scattering, still do not occur and have to be introduced phenomenologically using a relaxation time or T2-time for the polarization.
* Correlation effects: Taking the collision terms into account explicitly requires a large numerical effort, but can be done with state-of-the-art computers.[Hader, J.; Moloney, J. V.; Koch, S. W.; Chow, W. W. (2003). "Microscopic modeling of gain and luminescence in semiconductors". ''IEEE J. Sel. Top. Quant. Electron.'' 9 (3): 688–697. do]
10.1109/JSTQE.2003.818342
/ref> Technically speaking, the collision terms in the semiconductor Bloch equations are included in second- Born approximation. This microscopic model has the advantage of having predictive character, i.e., it yields the correct linewidth for any temperature or excitation density. In the other models, the relaxation time has to be extracted from experiment, but depends on the actual parameters meaning the experiment has to be redone for any temperature and excitation intensity.
The above-mentioned models yield the polarization of the gain medium. From this, the absorption or gain
Gain or GAIN may refer to:
Science and technology
* Gain (electronics), an electronics and signal processing term
* Antenna gain
* Gain (laser), the amplification involved in laser emission
* Gain (projection screens)
* Information gain in de ...
may be calculated via
where denotes the photon energy, is the background refractive index, is the vacuum speed of light, and are the vacuum permittivity
Vacuum permittivity, commonly denoted (pronounced "epsilon nought" or "epsilon zero"), is the value of the absolute dielectric permittivity of classical vacuum. It may also be referred to as the permittivity of free space, the electric consta ...
and background dielectric constant
The relative permittivity (in older texts, dielectric constant) is the permittivity of a material expressed as a ratio with the electric permittivity of a vacuum. A dielectric is an insulating material, and the dielectric constant of an insulat ...
, respectively, and is the electric field present in the gain medium. "" denotes the imaginary part of the quantity in brackets. The above formula can be derived from Maxwell's equations.
The figure shows a comparison of the calculated absorption spectra for high density where absorption becomes negative (gain) and low density absorption for the two latter theoretical approaches discussed. The differences in lineshape for the two theoretical approaches are obvious especially for the high carrier density case which applies to a laser system. The Hartree–Fock approximation leads to absorption below the bandgap (below about 0.94 eV), which is a natural consequence of the relaxation time approximation, but is completely unphysical. For the low density case, the T2-time approximation also overestimates the strength of the tails.
Laser resonator
A resonator is usually part of a semiconductor laser. Its effects have to be taken into account in the calculation. Therefore, the eigenmode expansion
Eigenmode expansion (EME) is a computational electrodynamics modelling technique. It is also referred to as the mode matching technique or the bidirectional eigenmode propagation method (BEP method). Eigenmode expansion is a linear frequency-domain ...
of the electric field is done not in plane waves but in the eigenmodes of the resonator which may be calculated, e.g., via the transfer-matrix method in planar geometries; more complicated geometries often require the use of full Maxwell-equations solvers ( finite-difference time-domain method). In the laser diode rate equations The laser diode rate equations model the electrical and optical performance of a laser diode. This system of ordinary differential equations relates the number or density of photons and charge carriers (electrons) in the device to the injection curr ...
, the photon life time enters instead of the resonator eigenmodes. In this approximative approach, may be calculated from the resonance mode[Smith, F. (1960). "Lifetime Matrix in Collision Theory". ''Physical Review'' 118 (1): 349–356. do]
10.1103/PhysRev.118.349
/ref> and is roughly proportional to the strength of the mode within the cavity. Fully microscopic modeling of laser emission can be performed with the semiconductor luminescence equations
The semiconductor luminescence equations (SLEs)Kira, M.; Jahnke, F.; Koch, S.; Berger, J.; Wick, D.; Nelson, T.; Khitrova, G.; Gibbs, H. (1997). "Quantum Theory of Nonlinear Semiconductor Microcavity Luminescence Explaining "Boser" Experiments". ...
[Kira, M.; Koch, S. W. (2011). ''Semiconductor Quantum Optics''. Cambridge University Press. ] where the light modes enter as an input. This approach includes many-body interactions and correlation effects systematically, including correlations between quantized light and the excitations of the semiconductor. Such investigations can be extended to studying new intriguing effects emerging in semiconductor quantum optics.
See also
* Semiconductor Bloch equations
* Semiconductor luminescence equations
The semiconductor luminescence equations (SLEs)Kira, M.; Jahnke, F.; Koch, S.; Berger, J.; Wick, D.; Nelson, T.; Khitrova, G.; Gibbs, H. (1997). "Quantum Theory of Nonlinear Semiconductor Microcavity Luminescence Explaining "Boser" Experiments". ...
* Semiconductor optical gain
* Coherent effects in semiconductor optics
The interaction of matter with light, i.e., electromagnetic fields, is able to generate a coherent superposition of excited quantum states in the material. ''Coherent'' denotes the fact that the material excitations have a well defined phase rela ...
* Quantum-optical spectroscopy
Quantum-optical spectroscopyKira, M.; Koch, S. (2006).
"Quantum-optical spectroscopy of semiconductors". ''Physical Review A'' 73 (1).
doibr>10.1103/PhysRevA.73.013813 .Koch, S. W.; Kira, M.; Khitrova, G.; Gibbs, H. M. (2006). "Semiconductor exc ...
* Lasers
* Laser spectroscopy
Spectroscopy is the field of study that measures and interprets the electromagnetic spectra that result from the interaction between electromagnetic radiation and matter as a function of the wavelength or frequency of the radiation. Matter ...
* Nonlinear theory of semiconductor lasers
References
Further reading
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{{Semiconductor laser
Semiconductor lasers