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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

High-Quality Extended-Wavelength Materials for Optoelectronic Applications

January 2013 (has links)
abstract: Photodetectors in the 1.7 to 4.0 μm range are being commercially developed on InP substrates to meet the needs of longer wavelength applications such as thermal and medical sensing. Currently, these devices utilize high indium content metamorphic Ga1-xInxAs (x > 0.53) layers to extend the wavelength range beyond the 1.7 μm achievable using lattice matched GaInAs. The large lattice mismatch required to reach the extended wavelengths results in photodetector materials that contain a large number of misfit dislocations. The low quality of these materials results in a large nonradiative Shockley Read Hall generation/recombination rate that is manifested as an undesirable large thermal noise level in these photodetectors. This work focuses on utilizing the different band structure engineering methods to design more efficient devices on InP substrates. One prospective way to improve photodetector performance at the extended wavelengths is to utilize lattice matched GaInAs/GaAsSb structures that have a type-II band alignment, where the ground state transition energy of the superlattice is smaller than the bandgap of either constituent material. Over the extended wavelength range of 2 to 3 μm this superlattice structure has an optimal period thickness of 3.4 to 5.2 nm and a wavefunction overlap of 0.8 to 0.4, respectively. In using a type-II superlattice to extend the cutoff wavelength there is a tradeoff between the wavelength reached and the electron-hole wavefunction overlap realized, and hence absorption coefficient achieved. This tradeoff and the subsequent reduction in performance can be overcome by two methods: adding bismuth to this type-II material system; applying strain on both layers in the system to attain strain-balanced condition. These allow the valance band alignment and hence the wavefunction overlap to be tuned independently of the wavelength cutoff. Adding 3% bismuth to the GaInAs constituent material, the resulting lattice matched Ga0.516In0.484As0.970Bi0.030/GaAs0.511Sb0.489superlattice realizes a 50% larger absorption coefficient. While as, similar results can be achieved with strain-balanced condition with strain limited to 1.9% on either layer. The optimal design rules derived from the different possibilities make it feasible to extract superlattice period thickness with the best absorption coefficient for any cutoff wavelength in the range.   / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Electrical Engineering 2013
2

N-type Modulation-Doped InGaAlAs/InP Strain-Balanced Multiple Quantum Wells for Photonic Integrated Circuits

Feng, Jui-yang 04 August 2008 (has links)
In this work, we have reported the design, MBE-growth and fabrication of strain-balanced n-type modulation-doped (MD) InGaAlAs/InGaAs multiple quantum wells laser/SOAs on InP. The quantum well contains a lattice-matched InGaAs core, a compressive-strained InGaAs padding, and a tensile-strained InGaAlAs spacer. Two kinds of samples having similar structure but different fundamental transition wavelength of 1.55 £gm and 1.48 £gm are separately prepared for investigating their characteristics in optical amplification under forward bias and electro-absorption under reversed bias. Also, the technique of growing high-quality InGaAlAs with solid-source molecular beam epitaxy has been established and the resulting InGaAlAs bulk and QWs samples are extensively characterized by double-crystal X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, electroluminescence, and photoluminescence measurements. For £f = 1.55 £gm samples, ridge-waveguide lasers of Fabry-Perot (FP) type and tilted-end-facet (TEF) type were fabricated by a new developed multi-step wet-etching process. When injection current density > 20A/cm^2, electroluminescence spectra show higher optical gain for the quantum well e1-hh2 transition at £f = 1460 nm than the e1-hh1 transition at £f = 1550 nm. The FP laser shows a lasing peak of £f = 1514 nm at threshold. Additional lasing wavelength at £f =1528 nm and 1545 nm were observed sequentially as the injection current increased. However, for the TEF laser, only the emission at £f = 1511 nm was observed. These TE-polarized lasing wavelengths are consistent with the £_-like absorption peaks in photocurrent spectra. The lasing performance is possible attributed to optical transitions within quantum dots/wires which are formed by the strain-field profile and alloy segregation/migration. For £f = 1.48 £gm samples, the differential absorption spectroscopy, which measures the change of transmission (£GT/T) in the presence of electric field, is used to study the electro-absorption modulation behavior of MD-SOA¡¦s. A sample with n-type modulation-doping amounting to a sheet density of 3.5 ¡Ñ 10^11 cm^-2 per QW and combining with a hole-stopping barrier represents the largest chirp parameter (£Gn/£Gk) under reversed bias, which offers an excellent platform to realize electro-refractive devices with larger refractive index changes (£Gn) but lower differential absorption (£G£\) near £f = 1.55 £gm, which is also our interested region of operation. In addition, we have succeeded in reducing the length of conventional constant-width multimode interference (MMI) coupler of K = 0.15 and 0.28 more than 32% by a novel stepped-width design concept. By extending the stepped-with idea, we show that it is possible to obtain 2x2 waveguide couplers with new power splitting ratios of 7%, 64%, 80% and 93% for cross coupling by cascading two short MMI sections. We further realize freely chosen power splitting ratio by interconnecting a pair of unequal-width waveguides as the phase-tuning section into the middle of two short MMI sections. These compact and low loss MMI-based devices use only rectangular geometry without any bent, curved, and tapered waveguides. They offer valuable new possibilities for designing waveguide-based photonic integrated circuits.

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