Personal tools
You are here: Home Working group 2 P 2.1

P 2.1 exercise

— filed under:

Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers (VCSELs) are modern constructs which offer several advantages to classical edge-emitting lasers. However they introduce some new problems, of which one of the most important is the problem with achieving good horizontal electromagnetic field confinement and hence single-mode operation with large output powers. One of the recent solutions to this problem is the application of photonic-crystal structure.

The goal of this exercise is to check for the reliability and compare different numerical approaches that are capable of optical modeling of VCSELs with photonic crystal structure. As various models have different compexity and introduce different assumptions it would be interesting to know how accurate and efficient are those models for this particular problem.

Definition of the structure

The proposed device is an arsenide VCSEL designed for operation at 980µm. The structure details are presented in the table. Inside the cavity it has three 8nm-wide In0.2Ga0.8As quantum wells with two 5nm GaAs barriers.

 

  Thickness [nm] Material Refractive index Remarks
    Air 1.00  
Top DBR
24 pairs
69.40 GaAs 3.53  
79.55 AlGaAs 3.08  
Cavity 121.71 GaAs 3.53  
3 × 8.00 QW

3.56 + j×ng for r<a
3.56 - 0.01j for r≥a

QWs and barriers are in alternating order
2 × 5.00 GaAs 3.53
 121.71 GaAs 3.53  

Bottom DBR
19 pairs

79.55 AlGaAs 3.08  
69.40 GaAs

3.53

 
Substrate   GaAs 3.53  

 

pc-structure.png pc-vcsel.png

 

The photonic crystal consists of three rings of air holes etched in top DBRs with single
defefect cavity in the center (see fig.). The task is to compute resonant wavelength and the threshold gain for every combination of the following parameter values:

  • PC lattice pitch µm: 2.0, 4.0, 7.0;
  • hole diameter d/a: 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8;
  • etching depth h: whole structure; cavity only; number of top DBR pairs ranging from 24 to 10.

The gain apperture is always assumed to be equal to the pitch (see table).

Download PDF File

Document Actions