Understanding Lasers

Chapter 9.4.2: Homojunction Lasers

9.4.2 Homojunction Lasers

The first semiconductor lasers consisted of two layers made from the same compound, generally gallium arsenide, one doped with a material that added extra electrons to the conduction band to make an n-type semiconductor, the other with a material that produced holes in the valence band to make a p-type material. A junction zone separated them. These devices were called homostructure or homojunction lasers because their two layers were made from the same compound semiconductor.

Homojunction diodes worked, but they did not work very well and required cooling even to produce pulses of light because they were not able to confine the locations of either current carriers or light very well.

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