Understanding Lasers

Chapter 9.11.3: Red Diode Lasers

9.11.3 Red Diode Lasers

Although we take red diode lasers for granted today, the first diode lasers with beams easily visible to the human eye, at 670 nm, did not reach the market until the late 1980s. These lasers have active layers of Ga0.5In0.5P surrounded by layers in which aluminum replaced some of the gallium to raise the band gap and improve confinement.

Red diodes also are available at 635 nm, where the human eye is more than 10 times more sensitive than at 670 nm. The 635-nm lasers have active layers of AlGaInP, in which the number of aluminum, gallium, and indium atoms together equal the number of phosphorous atoms, a blend that can be written as AlyGaxIn1 x yP. Like 670 nm diodes, they are grown on GaAs substrates.

Red lasers can generate moderate powers, to a few watts from an array, with the available power generally increasing at longer wavelengths.

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