Publications by Type: Journal Article

2001
V Spagnolo, M Troccoli, G Scamarcio, C Gmachl, F Capasso, A Tredicucci, AM Sergent, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, and AY Cho. 2001. “Temperature profile of GaInAs/AlInAs/InP quantum cascade-laser facets measured by microprobe photoluminescence.” APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 78, 15, Pp. 2095-2097.Abstract
The local temperature of quantum-cascade lasers operating in continuous wave mode is reported. This information is extracted from the thermal shift of the band-to-band photoluminescence peaks in the AlInAs and InP cladding layers of quantum-cascade laser facets using a high-resolution microprobe setup. Interpolation by means of a two-dimensional heat diffusion model allows to obtain the temperature profile and the thermal conductivity in the waveguide core. Comparison between substrate and epilayer-side mounted lasers shows the superior thermal dissipation capability of the latter, and explains their better performance with respect to threshold current and maximum operating temperature. (C) 2001 American Institute of Physics.
2000
BA Paldus, CC Harb, TG Spence, RN Zare, C Gmachl, F Capasso, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AL Hutchinson, and AY Cho. 2000. “Cavity ringdown spectroscopy using mid-infrared quantum-cascade lasers.” OPTICS LETTERS, 25, 9, Pp. 666-668.Abstract
Cavity ringdown spectra of ammonia at 10 parts in 10(9) by volume (ppbv) and higher concentrations were recorded by use of a 16-mW continuous-wave quantum-casacde distributed-feedback laser at 8.5 mu m whose wavelength was continuously temperature tuned over 15 nm. A sensitivity (noise-equivalent absorbance) of 3.4 x 10(-9) cm(-1) Hz(-1/2) was achieved for ammonia in nitrogen at standard temperature and pressure, which corresponds to a detection limit of 0.25 ppbv. (C) 2000 Optical Society of America.
A Tredicucci, F Capasso, C Gmachl, DL Sivco, AL Hutchinson, SNG Chu, and AY Cho. 2000. “Continuous wave operation of long wavelength (lambda similar or equal to 11 mu m) inter-miniband lasers.” ELECTRONICS LETTERS, 36, 10, Pp. 876-878.Abstract
A long wavelength (1 similar or equal to 11 mu m) quantum cascade laser based on inter-miniband transitions in semiconductor superlattices is reported. The device operates continuous wave up to a temperature of 85K, with a maximum output power of 75mW at 25K, both record values for unipolar lasers of comparable wavelength.
AA Kosterev, RF Curl, FK Tittel, C Gmachl, F Capasso, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AL Hutchinson, and AY Cho. 2000. “Effective utilization of quantum-cascade distributed-feedback lasers in absorption spectroscopy.” APPLIED OPTICS, 39, 24, Pp. 4425-4430.Abstract
A variable duty cycle quasi-cw frequency scanning technique was applied to reduce thermal effects resulting from the high heat dissipation of type I quantum-cascade lasers. This technique was combined with a 100-m path-length multipass cell and a zero-air background-subtraction technique to enhance detection sensitivity to a parts-in-10(9) (ppb) concentration level for spectroscopic trace-gas detection of CH4, N2O, H2O, and C2H5OH in ambient air at 7.9 mu m. A new technique for analysis of dense high resolution absorption spectra was applied to detection of ethanol in ambient air, yielding a 125-ppb detection limit. (C) 2000 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: 140.5960, 280.3420, 300.6320, 010.1280.
M Troccoli, G Scamarcio, V Spagnolo, A Tredicucci, C Gmachl, F Capasso, DL Sivco, AY Cho, and M Striccoli. 2000. “Electronic distribution in superlattice quantum cascade lasers.” APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 77, 8, Pp. 1088-1090.Abstract
The electron population in the excited miniband of quantum cascade structures with intrinsic superlattice active regions is extracted from the fine structure analysis of spontaneous interminiband electroluminescence spectra. At current densities typical of laser thresholds, the electrons injected into the excited miniband of a (GaInAs)(6 nm)/(AlInAs)(1.8 nm) superlattice are described by a nonequilibrium thermal distribution characterized by temperatures T-e> 200 K, much higher than the lattice temperature T-L=15 K. (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0003-6951(00)04534-4].
R Paiella, F Capasso, C Gmachl, CG Bethea, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AL Hutchinson, AY Cho, and HC Liu. 2000. “Generation and detection of high-speed pulses of mid-infrared radiation with intersubband semiconductor lasers and detectors.” IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, 12, 7, Pp. 780-782.Abstract
Semiconductor lasers and detectors based on intersubband electron transitions are used to generate and measure high-speed pulses of mid-infrared radiation. In particular, we use a commercial comb generator to gain-switch a state-of-the-art 8-mu m quantum cascade laser mounted in a high-speed package, The output pulses of this device are then detected with a small-area quantum-well infrared photodetector, also packaged for high-speed operation. Pulse widths shorter than 90 ps are directly measured with this system. Accounting for the finite response time of the detection electronics, a deconvolved duration of approximately 45 ps is extrapolated.
C Gmachl, F Capasso, A Tredicucci, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AL Hutchinson, and AY Cho. 2000. “High power and tunable single-mode quantum cascade lasers.” MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING B-SOLID STATE MATERIALS FOR ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY, 75, 2-3, Pp. 93-99.Abstract
Quantum cascade (QC) lasers are a fundamentally new semiconductor laser source designed by methods of `bandstructure engineering' and realized by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). One of their most intriguing features is the cascading scheme, which results in the lasers' intrinsic potential for high optical output power. QC-lasers with varying numbers, from one to 75, of cascaded active regions and injectors have been studied. Pulsed peak output power levers of greater than or equal to 500 mW at room temperature and greater than or equal to 1 W at 200 K have been obtained for a 2.25 mm long and approximate to 12 mu m wide Fabry-Perot laser-stripe with 75 cascades. In continuous wave operation, 200 mW have been measured from one facet at 80 K and still 60 mW at 110 K, both from lasers with 30 stages. These lasers have an InP top cladding layer grown by MBE using solid source phosphorous. Widely tunable single-mode QC-distributed feedback (DFB) lasers have been fabricated in the wavelength range around 8.5 mu m. A side-mode suppression ratio of 30 dB and a 140 nm single-mode tuning range (thermal tuning between 10 and 320 K for lasers operated in pulsed mode) have been obtained. QC-DFB lasers driven in cw-mode display a tunability of approximate to 70 nm as a result of thermal tuning between 20 and 120 K. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science S.A. All rights reserved.
C Gmachl, A Tredicucci, F Capasso, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, AM Sergent, T Mentzel, and AY Cho. 2000. “High temperature (T >= 425K) pulsed operation of quantum cascade lasers.” ELECTRONICS LETTERS, 36, 8, Pp. 723-725.Abstract
High temperature pulsed operation of quantum cascade lasers is reported. At 425K and 8.4 mu m wavelength a peak output power of 17mW was measured for a laser incorporating 75 stages of alternated active regions and injectors.
A Tredicucci, F Capasso, C Gmachl, DL Sivco, AL Hutchinson, and AY Cho. 2000. “High-performance quantum cascade lasers with electric-field-free undoped superlattice.” IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, 12, 3, Pp. 260-262.Abstract
An optimized design of quantum cascade lasers with electric field free undoped superlattice active regions is presented. In these structures the superlattice is engineered so that: 1) the first two extended states of the upper miniband are separated by an optical phonon to avoid phonon bottleneck effects and concentrate the injected electron density in the lower state and 2) the oscillator strength of the laser transition is maximized. The injectors' doping profile is also optimized by concentrating the doping in a single quantum well to reduce the electron density in the active material. These design changes result in major improvements of the pulse/continuous-wave performance such as a weak temperature dependence of threshold (T-0 = 167 K), high peak powers (100-200 mW at 300 K) and higher CW operating temperatures for devices emitting around at lambda similar to 8.5 mu m.
C Gmachl, F Capasso, A Tredicucci, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AL Hutchinson, and AY Cho. 2000. “High-power, continuous-wave, current-tunable, single-mode quantum-cascade distributed-feedback lasers at lambda congruent to 5.2 and lambda congruent to 7.95 mu m.” OPTICS LETTERS, 25, 4, Pp. 230-232.Abstract
Quantum-cascade distributed-feedback lasers with high-power, continuous-wave (cw), tunable, single-mode emission are reported. The emission wavelengths are near 5.2 and 7.95 mu m. The lasers are operated at liquid-nitrogen temperature and above. A maximum output power of >100 mW is obtained per facet at 80 K for both wavelengths, which is the result of careful positioning of the peak gain with respect to the Bragg wavelength. Continuous tuning with either heat-sink temperature or cw current is demonstrated. The tuning coefficients are 0.35 nm/K (5.2 mu m) and 0.51 nm/K (7.95 mu m) for thermal tuning and vary from 20 to 40 nm/A for tuning with current. The lasers are being used in high-resolution and high-sensitivity gas-sensing applications. (C) 2000 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: 140.3070, 140.3600, 140.5960.
R Colombelli, F Capasso, C Gmachl, A Tredicucci, AM Sergent, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, and AY Cho. 2000. “Intersubband electroluminescence from long-side-cleaved quantum-cascade lasers above threshold: Investigation of phonon bottleneck effects.” APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 77, 24, Pp. 3893-3895.Abstract
A technique is reported which allows the observation of intersubband spontaneous emission in unipolar quantum-cascade lasers above threshold. The technique consists of cleaving the laser stripe in the direction perpendicular to its facets. This does not negatively affect the operation of the lasers thanks to their unipolar nature. To show the potential of the method, we apply it to superlattice quantum-cascade (QC) lasers with various active region designs. We directly observe the saturation of the luminescence intensity at the laser transition, and a bottleneck effect for transitions separated from the lasing one by less than one optical phonon. This technique should help in the optimization of QC lasers. (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0003-6951(00)04949-4].
R Paiella, F Capasso, C Gmachl, HY Hwang, DL Sivco, AL Hutchinson, AY Cho, and HC Liu. 2000. “Monolithic active mode locking of quantum cascade lasers.” APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 77, 2, Pp. 169-171.Abstract
We demonstrate active mode locking of a high-speed 8 mu m quantum cascade laser in a monolithic configuration, at a repetition rate of 11.6 GHz. Evidence of mode locking is obtained from the measured optical spectra and corresponding interferograms, as well as from the power spectra of the photocurrent detected with a fast quantum-well infrared photodetector. An estimate for the pulse width of approximately 5 ps is inferred from the experimental results. Mode-locked operation is observed up to a maximum temperature of over 120 K. (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0003-6951(00)01628-4].
F Capasso, C Gmachl, R Paiella, A Tredicucci, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AY Cho, and HC Liu. 2000. “New frontiers in quantum cascade lasers and applications.” IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN QUANTUM ELECTRONICS, 6, 6, Pp. 931-947.Abstract
Recent advances and new directions in quantum cascade (QC) lasers are discussed in this paper. Invented in 1994 following many years of research on band-structure engineered semiconductors and devices grown by molecular beam epitaxy, this fundamentally new laser has rapidly advanced to a leading position among midinfrared semiconductor lasers in terms of wavelength agility as well as power and temperature performance. Because of the cascaded structure, QC lasers have a slope efficiency proportional to the number of stages. Devices with 100 stages having a record peak power of 0.6 W at room temperature are reported here. QC lasers in the AlInAs-GaInAs lattice matched to InP material system can now be designed to emit in the whole midinfrared range from 4 to 20 mum by appropriately choosing the thickness of the quantum wells in the active region. Using strained AlInAs-GaInAs, wavelengths as short as 3.4 mum have been produced, New results on QC lasers emitting at 19 mum, the longest ever realized in a III-V semiconductor laser, are reported. These devices use innovative plasmon waveguides to greatly enhance the mode confinement factor, thereby reducing the thickness of the epitaxial material. By use of a distributed feedback (DFB) geometry, QC lasers show single-mode emission with a 30-dB side-mode suppression ratio. Broad continuous single-mode tuning by either temperature or current has been demonstrated in these DFB QC lasers at wavelengths in two atmospheric windows (3-5 and 8-13 mum), with continuous-wave linewidths <1 MHz when freerunning and 10 KHz with suitable locking to the side of a molecular transition. These devices have been used in a number of chemical sensing and spectroscopic applications, demonstrating the capability of detecting parts per billion in volume of several trace gases. Sophisticated band-structure engineering has allowed the design and demonstration of bidirectional lasers, These devices emit different wavelengths for opposite bias polarities. The last section of the paper deals,vith the high-speed operation of QC lasers, Gain switching with pulse widths similar to 50 ps and active modelocking with a few picosecond-long pulses have been demonstrated. Finally a new type of passive modelocking has been demonstrated in QC lasers, which relies on the giant and ultrafast optical Kerr effect of intersubband transitions.
CM Gittins, ET Wetjen, C Gmachl, F Capasso, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, and AY Cho. 2000. “Quantitative gas sensing by backscatter-absorption measurements of a pseudorandom code modulated lambda similar to 8-mu m quantum cascade laser.” OPTICS LETTERS, 25, 16, Pp. 1162-1164.Abstract
We have demonstrated quantitative chemical vapor detection with a multimode quantum cascade (QC) laser. Experiments incorporated pseudorandom code (PRC) modulation of the laser intensity to permit sensitive absorption measurements of isopropanol vapor at 8.0 pm. The demonstration shows the practicality of one technical approach for implementing low-peak-power QC lasers in the transmitter portion of a differential absorption lidar (DIAL) system. With a 31-chip, 300-ns/chip PRC sequence, the measured isopropanol detection limit was 12 parts in 10(6) by volume times meters (similar to 3 X 10(-3) absorption) for a simple backscatter-absorption measurement configuration. (C) 2000 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: 280.1910, 140.3070.
R Paiella, F Capasso, C Gmachl, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, AL Hutchinson, AY Cho, and HC Liu. 2000. “Self-mode-locking of quantum cascade lasers with giant ultrafast optical nonlinearities.” SCIENCE, 290, 5497, Pp. 1739-1742.Abstract
We report on the generation of picosecond self-mode-locked pulses from midinfrared quantum cascade Lasers, at wavelengths within the important molecular fingerprint region. These devices are based on intersubband electron transitions in semiconductor nanostructures, which are characterized by some of the largest optical nonlinearities observed in nature and by picosecond relaxation Lifetimes. Our results are interpreted with a model;in which one of these nonlinearities, the intensity-dependent refractive index of the Lasing transition, creates a nonlinear waveguide where the optical Losses decrease with increasing intensity. This favors the generation of ultrashort pulses, because of their Larger instantaneous intensity relative to continuous-wave emission.
C Gmachl, F Capasso, R Kohler, A Tredicucci, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, and AY Cho. 2000. “The sense-ability of semiconductor lasers - Mid-infrared tunable quantum cascade lasers for gas-sensing applications.” IEEE CIRCUITS & DEVICES, 16, 3, Pp. 10-18.
A Tredicucci, C Gmachl, F Capasso, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, and AY Cho. 2000. “Single-mode surface-plasmon laser.” APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 76, 16, Pp. 2164-2166.Abstract
Surface-plasmon modes confined at the interface between a metal and a semiconductor are exploited in place of conventional dielectric waveguides for the realization of a lambda similar to 17 mu m semiconductor laser. The device is based on the quantum cascade concept and outperforms with its 38 mW of peak output power and 240 K of maximum operating temperature any previous semiconductor laser of comparable wavelength. Pure single-wavelength emission with a tuning rate of similar to 1 nm/K is achieved using Bragg reflection from a two-metal grating that modulates the skin depth of the surface plasmons. (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0003-6951(00)02316-0].
R Kohler, C Gmachl, A Tredicucci, F Capasso, DL Sivco, SNG Chu, and AY Cho. 2000. “Single-mode tunable, pulsed, and continuous wave quantum-cascade distributed feedback lasers at lambda congruent to 4.6-4.7 mu m.” APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 76, 9, Pp. 1092-1094.Abstract
Single-mode tunable quantum-cascade distributed feedback lasers emitting at 4.6-4.7 mu m wavelength are reported. The lasers employ strained heterostructure material with global strain compensation to provide the large band offset needed for high-performance short wavelength operation. Pulsed, continuously tunable single-mode emission is achieved from 90 to 300 K with a tuning range of 65 nm. Peak output power levels of 100 mW at room temperature are obtained. In continuous-wave operation, current tunable single-mode emission is demonstrated around liquid-nitrogen temperature with a tuning range of 20 nm (over a current range of 450 mA). The maximum output power in continuous wave at 80 K is 150 mW. (C) 2000 American Institute of Physics. [S0003-6951(00)01209-2].
R Kohler, C Gmachl, F Capasso, A Tredicucci, DL Sivco, and AY Cho. 2000. “Single-mode tunable quantum cascade lasers in the spectral range of the CO2 laser at lambda=9.5-10.5 mu m.” IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, 12, 5, Pp. 474-476.Abstract
Widely tunable, single-mode quantum cascade distributed feedback (QC-DFB) lasers based on a complex coupling scheme and operating in the wavelength range of the CO2 laser (lambda approximate to 9.5-10.5 mu m) are reported. Dynamic single-mode emission up to high current levels is obtained. The continuous single-mode tuning range is 150 nm, while the tuning range of the equivalent Fabry-Perot laser is similar to 400 nm, By homogeneously reducing all layer thicknesses by 10%, the wavelength coverage of a single QC-laser design can be extended to cover one entire regular band of the fundamental CO2 laser spectrum.
JT Remillard, Du Y, WH Weber, F Capasso, C Gmachl, AL Hutchinson, DL Sivco, JN Baillargeon, and AY Cho. 2000. “Sub-Doppler resolution limited Lamb-dip spectroscopy of NO with a quantum cascade distributed feedback laser.” OPTICS EXPRESS, 7, 7, Pp. 243-248.Abstract
A quantum cascade distributed feedback laser operating at 5.2 mu m is used to obtain sub-Doppler resolution limited saturation features in a Lamb-dip experiment on the R(13.5)(1/2) and R(13.5)(3/2) transitions of NO. The dips appear as transmission spikes with full widths of similar to 4.3 MHz. At this resolution the 73 MHz Lambda-doubling of the R(13.5)(3/2) line, which is normally obscured by the 130 MHz Doppler broadening, is easily resolved. (C) 2000 Optical Society of America.

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