New insight into how semiconductor lasers work

  

The development of specific terahertz equipment has allowed them to investigate this process for the first time. Their results, published in Nature Communications, are expected to underpin the future development of semiconductor lasers, including those used in public and private sector-owned telecommunications systems.

It has been predicted that operating frequencies within semiconductor lasers stabilise on a timescale of a few nanoseconds (i.e. a few billionths of a second) and can be changed within a few hundreds of picoseconds (I.e. thousandths of a nanosecond).

However, until now, no detector has been capable of measuring and proving this precisely, and the best results have only been achieved on nanosecond timescales, which are too slow to allow really efficient analysis or to be used to develop more effective systems.

Researchers from the University of Leeds, working with colleagues at École Normal Supérieure in Paris, France and the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia have been able to use terahertz frequency quantum cascade lasers and a technique called terahertz time-domain spectroscopy to understand this laser stabilisation process.

The terahertz-powered technology can measure the wavelength of light in periods of femtoseconds, that is millionths of a nanosecond, giving what has been described by the team as unprecedented levels of detail. By knowing the speed at which wavelengths change within lasers, and what happens during that process within miniscule time frames, more efficient devices and systems can be built.

The Leeds elements of the study were carried out in the University’s Terahertz Photonics Laboratory, part of the University’s Bragg Centre for Materials Research.

Dr Iman Kundu, principal author of the research paper explaining the group’s findings, said: “We’ve exploited the ultrafast detection capabilities of terahertz technology to watch laser emissions evolve from multiple colours to a single wavelength over less than a billionth of a second.

“Now that we can see the detailed emission of the lasers over such incredibly small time frames, we can see how the wavelength of light changes as one moves from one steady state to a new steady state.

“The benefits for commercial systems designers are potentially significant. Terahertz technology isn’t available to many sectors, but we believe its value lies in being able to highlight trends and explain the detailed operation of integrated photonic devices, which are used in complex imaging systems which might be found in the pharmaceutical or electronics sectors.

“Designers can then apply these findings to lasers operating at different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, as the underlying physics will be very similar.”

Professor Edmund Linfield, Chair of Terahertz Electronics at the University of Leeds, who was also involved in the study said: “We’re using the highly advanced capabilities of terahertz technology to shine a light on the operation of lasers.

“Our research is aimed at showing engineers and developers where to look to drive increased performance in their own systems. By doing this, we will increase the global competitiveness of the UK’s science and engineering base.”

The research was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (HyperTerahertz programme grant), which is part of UKRI; the Royal Society, the Wolfson Foundation; the European Union’s ULTRAQCL grant and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France.