Understanding Lasers

Chapter 9.5: Confinement in the Junction Plane

9.5 CONFINEMENT IN THE JUNCTION PLANE

The first diode lasers produced recombination energy and light across the entire junction plane. One of the refinements needed to allow continuous operation at room temperature was concentrating the drive current and stimulated emission to a narrow stripe in the junction plane, as shown in Figure 9-11. This confinement increases the power density, which improves efficiency and performance.

Narrow stripes limit the number of transverse modes the laser can oscillate in and, thus, improve beam quality. Typically, the stripes are only a few micrometers wide.

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