Sources and Detectors: Manjunatha. K. H. EC Department PDIT, Hosapete - 583 225
Sources and Detectors: Manjunatha. K. H. EC Department PDIT, Hosapete - 583 225
Presentation by,
MANJUNATHA. K. H.
EC Department
PDIT, Hosapete – 583 225
Direct Band Gap Semiconductors
Indirect Band Gap Semiconductors
E E E
CB
Indirect Bandgap, Eg
Ec CB
Direct Bandgap Eg Photon CB Ec Er Ec
Ev kcb Phonon
Ev Ev
VB
VB kvb VB
–k k –k k –k k
(a) GaAs (b) Si (c) Si with a recombination center
(a) In GaAs the minimum of the CB is directly above the maximum of the VB. GaAs is
therefore a direct bandgap semiconductor. (b) In Si, the minimum of the CB is displaced from
the maximum of the VB and Si is an indirect bandgap semiconductor. (c) Recombination of
an electron and a hole in Si involves a recombination center .
© 1999 S.O. Kasap, Optoelectronics (Prentice Hall)
Light-Emitting Diodes (LEDs)
RADIANCE
Measure of optical power radiated into a unit
solid angle per unit area of the emitting
surface.(unit is Watts.)
• Emission Response Time
Time delay between application of a current
pulse and respective optical emission.
Quantum efficiency
Related to fraction of electron hole pairs
recombine radiatively.
LED structures
• For high radiance and quantum efficiency
The LED must have
Optical confinement
Achieve high level Radiative
Recombination in the active region of the
device-yield high quantum efficiency
Carrier confinement
Preventing absorption of the emitted
radiation by the material surrounding the PN
junction.
HETRO JUNCTION STRUCTURE
• Used to achieve Carrier and optical confinement
• Consists of two adjoining semiconductor with
different band gap energies
• Band gap energy difference of adjacent layers
confines charge carriers.
• Refractive Index differences of adjoining layers
confines optical field to the central active layer.
Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000
a) Cross-section drawing of a typical GaAlAs double
hetero-structure light emitter. In this structure, x>y
to provide for both carrier confinement and optical
guiding.
n(t ) n0 e t /
• n is the excess carrier density,
dn n
R
dt
• Bulk recombination rate (R)=Radiative recombination rate +
nonradiative recombination rate
bulk recombinat ion rate ( R 1/τ )
radiative recombinat ion rate ( Rr 1/τ r ) nonradiati ve recombinat ion rate( Rnr 1/τ nr )
With an external supplied current density of J the rate equation for the electron-hole
recombination is:
dn(t ) J n
dt qd
q : charge of the electron; d : thickness of recombinat ion region
In equilibrium condition: dn/dt=0
J
n
qd
INTERNAL QUANTUM EFFICIENCY & OPTICAL POWER
(1 R) 2
I trans I inc [4-18]
(1 R) 2 4R sin 2 (kL)
R: reflectance of the optical intensity, k: optical wavenumber
Hetero junctions
Semiconductor lasers cleaved facets are used instead of
external mirrors
Reflectivity Rm=(n-1/n+1)^2
In DH structures-carrier and optical confinement reduces
threshold currents for lasing by a factor 100
DH forward bias applied by +ve to p & -ve to n.
Voltage correspond to band gap energy applied –large no
of es are injected into active layer lasing commences.
Small amount of energy required for operation of laser.
Realized only by laser pumped above threshold
Threshold current- current needed to reach threshold
Fabry Perot resonator cavity for Laser Diode
• Laser diode is an improved LED, in the sense
that uses stimulated emission in semiconductor
from optical transitions between distribution
energy states of the valence and conduction
bands with optical resonator structure such as
Fabry-Perot resonator with both optical and
carrier confinements.
Cavity much smaller
250 – 500 um long
5 – 15 um wide
0.1 – 0.2 um Thick
DFB (Distributed Feedback)Laser
Laser Diode Characteristics
R1 n1 R2
Z=0 n2 Z=L
exp( j 2 L) 1
Optical output vs. drive current
Threshold gain & current density
1 1
gth ln [4-23]
2 L R1R2
For laser structure with strong carrier confinement, the threshold current
Density for stimulated emission can be well approximated by:
gth J th [4-24]
i ( g th )
ext
g th
q dP dP (mW )
0.8065[ m] [4-29]
E g dI dI (mA )
1
from eq. [4 - 25] Cn / ph 0 n nth [4-26]
C ph
qd sp sp
Semiconductor laser rate equations
• Rate equations relate the optical output power, or # of photons per unit
volume, , to the diode drive current or # of injected electrons per
unit volume, n. For active (carrier confinement) region of depth d, the
rate equations are:
d
Cn Rsp
dt ph
Photonratestimulated emission spontaneous emission photon loss [4-25]
dn J n
Cn
dt qd sp
electron rate injection spontaneous recombination stimulated emission
• The solution of the rate equations [4-25] gives the steady state
photon density, resulting from stimulated emission and
spontaneous emission as follows:
ph
s ( J J th ) ph Rsp [4-28]
qd
Laser Resonant Frequencies
• Lasing condition, namely eq. [4-22]:
2n
• Assuming the resonant frequency of the mth
mode is:
mc
m m 1,2,3,... [4-30]
2 Ln
c 2
m m1 [4-31]
2 Ln 2 Ln
Spectrum from a laser Diode
( 0 )
g ( ) g (0) exp : spectral width [4-32]
2
2
Laser Diode Structure & Radiation Pattern
2ne
B [4-33]
k
Frequency-Selective laser Diodes:
Distributed Feedback Reflector (DBR) laser
B 2
1
B (m )
2ne Le 2
[4-35]
Output spectrum symmetrically distributed around Bragg wavelength in an idealized DFB laser diode
Frequency-Selective laser Diodes:
Distributed Reflector (DR) laser
Modulation of Laser Diodes
• Internal Modulation: Simple but suffers from non-linear effects.
• External Modulation: for rates greater than 2 Gb/s, more
complex, higher performance.
• Most fundamental limit for the modulation rate is set by the
photon life time in the laser cavity:
1 c 1 1 c
ln g th
ph
[4-36]
n 2L R1 R2 n
• Another fundamental limit on modulation frequency is the
relaxation oscillation frequency given by:
1/ 2
1 1 I
f 1 [4-37]
2 sp ph I th
Relaxation oscillation peak
Pulse Modulated laser
• In a pulse modulated laser, if the laser is completely turned off
after each pulse, after onset of the current pulse, a time
t d delay,
given by:
Ip
t d ln [4-38]
I p ( I B I th )
x(t ) A cos t
y (t ) A0 A1 cos t A2 cos 2t ...
An
20 log
A1
Intermodulation Distortion
n1 , m 2
Harmonics:
Intermodulated Terms: