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A little impurity makes nanolasers shine

Adding zinc to GaAs lasers leads to 100 times improvement in emitted light

Scientists at Australian National University have improved the performance of tiny lasers by adding impurities, in a discovery which they believe will be central to the development of low-cost biomedical sensors, quantum computing, and a faster internet.

Researcher Tim Burgess added atoms of zinc to lasers made of GaAs, which led to a 100 times improvement in the amount of light from the lasers.

"Normally you wouldn't even bother looking for light from nanocrystals of GaAs - we were initially adding zinc simply to improve the electrical conductivity," said Burgess, a PhD student in the ANU Research School of Physics and Engineering.

"It was only when I happened to check for light emission that I realised we were onto something."

GaAs is challenging to work with at the nanoscale as the material requires a surface coating before it will produce light.Previous ANU studies have shown how to fabricate suitable coatings.

The new result complements these successes by increasing the amount of light generated inside the nanostructure, said research group leader Professor Chennupati Jagadish, from the ANU Research School of Physics Sciences.

"It is an exciting discovery and opens up opportunities to study other nanostructures with enhanced light emission efficiency so that we can shrink the size of the lasers further," he said.

Burgess said that the addition of the impurity GaAs did not only improve the light emission."The doped GaAs has a very short carrier lifetime of only a few picoseconds, which meant it would be well suited to use in high speed electronics components," he said.

"The doping has really has given these nanolasers a performance edge."

The research is published in Nature Communications.

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