| Literature DB >> 31209591 |
Junyan Cheng1, Patrick Quach1, Ding Wang1, Fang Liu1, Shangfeng Liu1, Liuyun Yang1, Huapeng Liu1, Bo Shen1,2,3, Yuzhen Tong1, Xinqiang Wang4,5,6.
Abstract
Effect of interface roughness of quantum wells, non-intentional doping, and alloy disorder on performance of GaN-based terahertz quantum cascade lasers (QCL) has been investigated by the formalism of nonequilibrium Green's functions. It was found that influence of alloy disorder on optical gain is negligible and non-intentional doping should stay below a reasonable concentration of 1017 cm-3 in order to prevent electron-impurities scattering degradation and free carrier absorption. More importantly, interface roughness scattering is found the dominating factor in optical gain degradation. Therefore, its precise control during the fabrication is critical. Finally, a gain of 60 cm-1 can be obtained at 300 K, showing the possibility of fabricating room temperature GaN Terahertz QCL.Entities:
Keywords: GaN; Interface roughness scattering; Quantum cascade lasers; Terahertz
Year: 2019 PMID: 31209591 PMCID: PMC6579807 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-019-3043-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Designed active region structure, conduction band profile, squared envelope functions, and carrier densities. a The layer sequence for one period is 1.6/6.2/1.6/3.4/1.0/3.4 nm. Barriers are indicated in italics font. The 6.2 nm-thick well is n-doped with n = 5 × 1017 cm−3. b Conduction band profile and squared envelope functions of the GaN/Al0.15Ga0.85N QCL considered in this study. An electric field of − 84.5 kV/cm is applied. c Carrier densities and conduction band of the QCL calculated in the NEGF model. The electric field applied is − 84.5 kV/cm. Temperature is set at 10 K.
Fig. 2Simulated maximum optical gain vs frequency and current-electric field simulations for different scattering process. a Simulated optical gain vs frequency taking account of different scattering process. b Current-electric field simulations of the GaN THz QCL taking account different scattering parameters. Temperature is set at 10 K
Fig. 3Simulated maximum optical gain vs frequency and current-electric field simulations for different IFR. a Simulated maximum optical gain vs frequency for different IFR. b Current-electric field simulations of the GaN THz QCL taking account different IFR. Temperature is set at 10 K
Fig. 4Characteristics of the calculated maximum gain vs lattice temperature