oclaro dsdbr comments on the oclaro documents: dsdbr training;l5000vcj datasheet c-band and...
TRANSCRIPT
Oclaro DSDBRComments on the Oclaro Documents:
DSDBR Training; L5000VCJ Datasheet • C-band and InP/InGaAs technology: the laser diode vertical structure• The Phase element• The Semiconductor Optical Amplifier (SOA)• The Optical Shutter• Considerations on Gain, Phase and SOA• Bragg reflectors• Tunable gratings• The rear reflector• The front reflector• Overall Tuning• The total chip structure• Reliability issues for the chip• Points to be clarified• The Locker
M.Vanzi January 2012
C-band and InP/InGaAs technology: the laser diode vertical structure
The C-band ranges from 191 to 196 THz, which corresponds to optical wavelengths (in vacuum) from 1570 to 1530 nmand to photon energies from 0.79 to 0.81 eV.
The ternary compound In0.53Ga0.47As has its bandgap at 0.777 eV (at 300°K), that leads its spectrum for spontaneous emission (Eg Eg+2kT) to completely embrace the C-band.
On the other side, this ternary compound is perfectly matched to the InP lattice, which allows for growing In0.53Ga0.47As by epitaxy on an InP substrate.
Moreover, the higher bandgap of InP itself (1.27 eV at 300°K) makes InP perfectly suitable for building the confinement layers of a laser diode with its active layer made of that ternary compound.
See my report: List of failure modes and mechanisms in Laser Diodes part 1/2.
Appendix 2. Epitaxial rules for DH lasers
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
InP
InGaAs
InP
InP
InGaAs
The Phase element .1
light
The same structure may act as a phase element, provided:
•Light enters the element from outside at frequency •No reflection exists at entrance and exit sides•A low, independent, forward current is allowed to flow
The injected current changes the charge densityThe charge density changes the refractive index nThe phase change across the distance L is
L
c
Ln
Ln
220
Low current= no gain= absorption= attenuation
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
mirr
or
mirr
or
gain phase
laser current phase current
A gain and a phase element can then be combined within a single monolithic structure
The Phase element .2
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
mirr
or
mirr
or
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
mirr
or
mirr
orPhase change is equivalent to a change in the cavity length.
•Spectrum envelope unchanged•Multimode operation survives•Modes shift with phase change•Mode spacing changes
The Phase element .3
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 6.5 7 7.5 8 8.5 9 9.5 10
Current mA
GHz
191 THz 196 THz
C-band channels
Fine tuning of the Oclaro phase element spans a 50 GHz range, that is equivalent to the minimum separation between C-band channels
The Phase element .4
The Semiconductor Optical Amplifier (SOA)
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
InP
InGaAs
InP
InP
InGaAs
light
The same structure may act as an Optical Amplifier, provided:
•Light enters the element from outside at frequency •No reflection exists at entrance and exit sides•A high, independent, forward current is allowed to flow
L
High current= gain= no absorption= amplification
The SOA is not a laser itself only because of the absence of its own resonant cavity
It is a pumped element as for fiber amplifiers
Anyway it also introduces a phase shift, because of the current injection
It does not affect modality: even multimodes are equally amplified.
As for the phase element, at low current the SOA attenuates light because of optical absorption.
This property is used enabling even reverse bias of the SOA, that turns itself into a highly absorbing element, that is an optical shutter
The Optical Shutter
Two slides about… wrong solutions
Considerations on Gain, Phase and SOA.1
Such a structure is: tunable and gain controllable, BUT multimodal and with SOA affecting phase control
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
mirr
or
mirr
or
gain phase
laser current phase current
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ard
curr
en
t
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
SOA current
Amplifier/shutter
A hypothetic structure
Considerations on Gain, Phase and SOA.2
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
fo
rw
ard
cu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ardcu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ardcu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
mirr
or
mirr
or
gain phase
laser current
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ardcu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
n-confinement
p-confinement
active layer
forw
ardcu
rre
nt
p-cap layer
Upper metal
n-substrate
lower metal
SOA current
amplifier
phase current
Such a structure would avoid SOA interference on phase controlBUT is not feasible in monolithic technology.And remains multimodal
Another hypothetic structure
Considerations on Gain, Phase and SOA.3
For tunability across the whole C-band one needs:
1) Single mode selection 2) Tunability 100 times wider than the range of the phase element3) Cavity resonance4) Gain flattening, if tuning affects gain5) Monitoring of power and frequency
The first two requirements ask for tunable gratings
Considerations on Gain, Phase and SOA.4
Bragg reflectors .1
The “tails” of the optical wave, extending outside the active layer, sense the corrugation as an effective modulation of the refractive index along the waveguide
na
nc
nc
ng
Effective index along the waveguide
They are made of corrugated layers, with proper diffraction index, in the vicinity of the active layer.Apart from corrugation, the structure is the same as for the gain element
waveguidelightMoving wavefront
tail
Any index variation acts on the propagating wave as an impedance variation for an electric signal.
Reflected waves are originated at any corrugation point.They can interfere positively (strong reflection) or negatively (null reflection), depending on .
The shape of the corrugation defines the reflection function R as a function of .
The reflection function is related to the Fourier transform of the grating function
Proper patterning of the grating allows for “R() engineering”
Bragg reflectors .2
Tunable gratings .1
na
nc
nc
ng
Tuning current
In order to span the whole C-band, the tuning should change by some 3%.This is excessive.
As for the phase element, when a given forward current is fed across the structure, the overall refractive index of the waveguide is multiplied by a constant factor.
That is equivalent to change =0/n
That is, in turn, equivalent to stretch the grating, and then to change the reflection function R()
phase rear Bragg reflector
a 6aAssuming a similar width of the ridge, the contact area on the rear Bragg reflector is about 6 times the area of the phase element.On the other side, the maximum current fed into the latter is 60 mA, while in the former is 10.This means a similar maximum injected density of charges, and then a similar tuning range.
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 6.5 7 7.5 8 8.5 9 9.5 10
Current mA
GHz
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Rear Current (mA)
Lasin
g W
avele
ng
th (
nm
)
Tunable gratings .2
The rear reflector .1
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
1.5 1.52 1.54 1.56 1.58 1.6
Wavelength (m)
C bandS band L band
In order to allow for full C-band coverage, the Oclaro rear Bragg reflector is designed to produce 7 peaks (supermodes), spaced of some 6-7 nm.Tuning will allow any wavelength in the C-band to be centered by at least one peak.
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Rear Current (mA)
Lasin
g W
avele
ng
th (
nm
)
shift of a single peak
Total shift of the “comb reflection”
It remains only to select the supermode, that is the specific peak
The rear reflector .2
The front reflector .1
The front reflector is made of a chirped grating.
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
1.5 1.52 1.54 1.56 1.58 1.6
Wavelength (m)
Re
fle
cti
on
co
eff
icie
nt rear Bragg reflector
front reflector
It is made of a continuously varying pitch, that produces a broad, uniform reflection across the wole C-band.
The front reflector .2 Tuning
When two adjacent contacts are fed by current, the effective local pitch is modified. This changes the reflection function, depleting some reflected wavelengths and enhancing others. A broad peak forms, able to select a single supermode
8 metal contacts, operated in pairs
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
1.5 1.52 1.54 1.56 1.58 1.6
Wavelength (m)
Re
fle
cti
on
co
eff
icie
nt
rear Bragg reflector
front reflector
tuned front reflector
Continuous tuning
Supermode selection
Overall Tuning
I Gain I Rear r I
Phase
1 3 5 7 Odd
Even 2 4 6 8
Front reflectors 7 + 8 = Short λ
ISOA
ARAR
The total structure is then full integrated into a single monolithic element
The total chip structure
Reliability issues for the chip
Advantages:
•No movable parts•Full internal cavity (no interfaces in open air)•Only one thermal control needed•No local mirrors (no COD)
Disadvantages:
•Many corrugated epitaxial interfaces: risk of defect growth•Rather high operating currents for rear reflector, coupled with corrugation•Absorbing elements: need for a SOA (further current)
Points to be clarified
1. Vertical structure (TEM required)2. Details of gratings (very many FIB-TEM required, in several locations)3. Material analysis
1. The bent ridge in the SOA sections calls for a laterally confined optical guide. A BH solution is expected (see List of Failures part 1)
2.1 The rear grating, in order to give a comb reflection, is expected to be a sampled structure
4
0
g x( )
400 x
2.2 The front grating, in order to give a wide flat reflection, is said to be a linearly chirped structure. This should be verified.
2
0
f x( )
1000 xA 1
The Locker .1
P
Split
TransmitPrimary beam
Transmit()
Reflection()
Beamsplitter
Photodiode (Rx) Photodiode (Tx) Etalon
PD -1
PD-2 The locker elements are slightly rotated in order to avoid unwanted resonance between back reflections.
The Etalon has a transmission function T given by (see my document: The Double Etalon …)
0
2 2sin1
1)(
F
T
Where GHznd
c1000 that implies nd 3 mm
The reflection function R is its complement to unit:
0
2
0
2
2sin1
2sin
)(
F
F
R
Their ratio is
0
2 2sin)(
)(
FT
R
It is useful to note that the beam reflected by the Etalon undergoes another splitting (dashed line) when crossing the splitter. This means that PD2 does not read the full reflection of the Etalon.
Anyway, being the splitter weakly reflecting, in order to save power in the primary beam, or the attenuation at PD2 is neglected, or is compensated by upscaling the PD2 reading.
Ch 49 Ch 50
The Locker .2
The Oclaro documents indicate the ratio R/T as determining the frequency, and the sum R+T as monitoring the total power.
About power, it is clear that the sum R+T is proportional to the intensity of the transmitted primary beam.
About frequency, Oclaro plots the difference T-R instead of the ratio R/T.The following graph plots everything. A value F=2 has been assumed in order to fit the original drawing.
In any case, the 100GHz channels result perfectly tuned at the maxima and minima of the four curvesThe utility of the ratio R/T is that tunes the 50GHz channels exactly at midway of the descending or ascending nearly linear parts of the curve (where the intensity read by the two photodiodes is equal).