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Researchers conjure up nanocavity super efficient laser

The GaAs/InAs laser is suited to optical communication systems and could herald a new era in low-energy data interconnects that communicate with light as well as electrons.

In the push towards ever-smaller and ever-faster data transmission technology, a team of Stanford electrical engineers has produced a nanoscale laser that they claim is much faster and vastly more energy efficient than anything available today.

To the Silicon Valley mantra of "faster, smaller" semiconductors, you can now add "more efficient." The electrical data interconnections inside the computers of America's massive datacentres consume huge amounts of electricity, and there is a technological drive afoot to reduce that consumption.

To that end, Stanford researchers have unveiled a tiny, highly efficient semiconductor laser that could herald a new era in low-energy data interconnects that communicate with light as well as electrons.

 



The wafer's holes 'act like a hall of mirrors to reflect photons back toward the center of the laser,' said Jelena Vuckovic, an associate professor of electrical engineering. (Courtesy of Jelena Vuckovic : Wafer with holes)

"Today's electrical data transmission circuits require a lot of energy to transmit a bit of information and are, relatively speaking, slow," said Jelena Vuckovic, an associate professor of electrical engineering at Stanford working on the new generation of nanoscale lasers.

She and her team, including Stanford graduate students Bryan Ellis and Gary Shambat, in collaboration with the research groups of James Harris at Stanford and Eugene Haller at the University of California-Berkeley, introduced their laser in a paper just published in Nature Photonics.

Vuckovic is working on a type of data transmitter known as a photonic-crystal laser. These lasers are particularly promising, not just for their speed and size, but because they operate at low thresholds and don't use much energy.

"We've produced a nanoscale optical data transmitter, a laser  that uses 1,000 times less energy and is 10 times faster than the very best laser technologies in commercial use today," said the professor. "Better yet, we believe we can improve upon those numbers."

While others have created low-threshold lasers, Vuckovic said, the most promising have required a second laser to inject them with the energy they need to work, known as "pumping", hardly an ideal solution.

"We really needed a laser pumped with electricity, not light," she said. The only available electrically pumped photonic-crystal laser was inefficient and difficult to fabricate, making it commercially impractical. Now, for the first time, Vuckovic says they have demonstrated an electrically pumped laser that is both easy to manufacture and delivers dramatically reduced energy consumption.

To create the laser, the researchers use MBE to grow GaAs layers on a GaAs substrate and intermix the layers with three thin layers of InAs. A cross-section reveals that the InAs appears are quantum dots within the wafer.

When done, the wafer resembles a nanophotonic deck of cards, a mere 220 nm thick.

Next, the engineers "dope" two discrete areas on top of the wafer with ions. On one side, the researchers seed ions of silicon, and on the other they implant ions of beryllium.

These two regions are faintly visible on the surface, widening toward each other, approaching but never quite meeting at the centre of the wafer. These ion-infused regions help focus the current flow to a very precise area at the core of the wafer where light is emitted, improving the performance of the laser.

Finally, with the basic wafer fabricated, the researchers have yet one more trick up their engineering sleeves. They finish by etching a precise honeycomb pattern of circular holes through the wafer.

The size and positioning of these holes is critical to the success of the laser. If the holes are too small or too large, spaced too closely or too far apart, the laser will not perform optimally and in some cases, it won't perform at all.

"These holes are almost perfectly round with smooth interior walls and are very important to the laser's function. They act like a hall of mirrors to reflect photons back toward the centre of the laser," said Vuckovic.

Here, in the heart of the wafer, the photons are concentrated and amplified into a tiny ball of light, a laser which can be modulated up to 100 billion times per second, 10 times the best data transmitters now in use. Thus the light becomes binary data – light on, 1; light off, 0.

At one end of a semiconductor circuit is a laser transmitter beaming out 1s and 0s as blasts of light. At the other end is a receiver that turns those blasts of light back into electrical impulses. All that is needed is a way to connect the two.

To do this, the researchers heat and stretch a thin fibreoptic filament, hundreds of times thinner than a human hair. The light from the laser travels along the fibre to the next junction in the circuit.

All this happens in a layer so thin hundreds of these nanophotonic transmitters could be arranged on a single layer, and many layers could then be stacked into a single chip.

Before Vuckovic's laser interconnect becomes commonplace, however, certain questions will need to be resolved. The new laser operates at relatively cold temperatures, 150 degrees Kelvin and below – about 190 degrees below zero Fahrenheit – but Vuckovic is confident and pressing forward.

"With improvements in processing," she said, "we can produce a laser that operates at room temperature while maintaining energy efficiency at about 1,000 times less than today's commercial technologies. We can see a light on the horizon."

Kovic's engineering research was made possible by funding from Stanford Graduate Fellowships, the Interconnect Focus Centre and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Further details of this work have been published in the paper “Ultralow-threshold electrically pumped quantum-dot photonic-crystal nanocavity laser” by Bryan Ellis et al, in Nature Photonics 5, 297– 300, (2011).     doi:10.1038/nphoton.2011.51
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