Wavelength stability in a hybrid photonic crystal laser through controlled nonlinear absorptive heating in the reflector.

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ID: 29168
2018
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Abstract
The need for miniaturized, fully integrated semiconductor lasers has stimulated significant research efforts into realizing unconventional configurations that can meet the performance requirements of a large spectrum of applications, ranging from communication systems to sensing. We demonstrate a hybrid, silicon  photonics-compatible photonic crystal (PhC) laser architecture that can be used to implement cost-effective, high-capacity light sources, with high side-mode suppression ratio and milliwatt output output powers. The emitted wavelength is set and controlled by a silicon PhC cavity-based reflective filter with the gain provided by a III-V-based reflective semiconductor optical amplifier (RSOA). The high power density in the laser cavity results in a significant enhancement of the nonlinear absorption in silicon in the high -factor PhC resonator. The heat generated in this manner creates a tuning effect in the wavelength-selective element, which can be used to offset external temperature fluctuations without the use of active cooling. Our approach is fully compatible with existing fabrication and integration technologies, providing a practical route to integrated lasing in wavelength-sensitive schemes.
Reference Key
bakoz2018wavelengthlight Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Bakoz, Andrei P;Liles, Alexandros A;Gonzalez-Fernandez, Alfredo A;Habruseva, Tatiana;Hu, Changyu;Viktorov, Evgeny A;Hegarty, Stephen P;O'Faolain, Liam;
Journal Light, science & applications
Year 2018
DOI
10.1038/s41377-018-0043-8
URL
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