| Literature DB >> 31847087 |
Wenjie Wang1,2, Wuze Xie1,2, Zejia Deng1,2, Mingle Liao1,2.
Abstract
Herein, the optical field distribution and electrical property improvements of the InGaN laser diode with an emission wavelength around 416 nm are theoretically investigated by adjusting the relative thickness of the first or last barrier layer in the three In0.15Ga0.85N/In0.02Ga0.98N quantum wells, which is achieved with the simulation program Crosslight. It was found that the thickness of the first or last InGaN barrier has strong effects on the threshold currents and output powers of the laser diodes. The optimal thickness of the first quantum barrier layer (FQB) and last quantum barrier layer (LQB) were found to be 225 nm and 300 nm, respectively. The thickness of LQB layer predominantly affects the output power compared to that of the FQB layer, and the highest output power achieved 3.87 times that of the reference structure (symmetric quantum well), which is attributed to reduced optical absorption loss as well as the reduced vertical electron leakage current leaking from the quantum wells to the p-type region. Our result proves that an appropriate LQB layer thickness is advantageous for achieving low threshold current and high output power lasers.Entities:
Keywords: InGaN laser diodes; asymmetric multiple quantum wells; barrier thickness; electron leakage current; optical absorption loss
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847087 PMCID: PMC6952886 DOI: 10.3390/mi10120875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Schematic of In0.15Ga0.85N/In0.02Ga0.98N quantum well laser diodes.
Figure 2The refractive index profile of the symmetric quantum well LD structure (red line) and the optical field distributions of the FQB-15 and FQB-100 structures.
Figure 3Optical field distribution of FQB or LQB structures (dashed lines and red arrows indicate the position of the electron blocking layer.).
Figure 4Optical confinement factor of LDs with different FQB or LQB layer thicknesses.
Figure 5Peak modal gain of LDs with different FQB or LQB layer thicknesses.
Figure 6V-I characteristic of lasers with varying FQB and LQB thickness.
Figure 7L-I characteristics of lasers with varying FQB or LQB layer thicknesses.
Figure 8Variation in L-I characteristics with different FQB or LQB layer laser structure under an injection current of 160 mA.
Figure 9Vertical electron current density of LDs with different FQB or LQB layer thickness.
Figure 10Energy band diagrams of reference LD structure (a) and LQB-300 structure (b) under an injection current of 160 mA.