4,023 research outputs found
Submilliamp threshold InGaAs-GaAs strained layer quantum-well laser
Strained-layer InGaAs-GaAs single-quantum-well buried-heterostructure lasers were fabricated by a hybrid beam epitaxy and liquid-phase epitaxy technique. Very low threshold currents, 2.4 mA for an uncoated laser (L=425 μm) and 0.75 mA for a coated laser (R~0.9, L=198 μm), were obtained. A 3-dB modulation bandwidth of 7.6 GHz was demonstrated at low bias current (14 mA). Procedures for material preparation and device fabrication are introduced
Parametric study of cavity length and mirror reflectivity in ultralow threshold quantum well InGaAs/AlGaAs lasers
Record low CW threshold currents of 16 μA at-room temperature and 21 μA at cryogenic temperature have been demonstrated in buried heterostructure strained layer, single quantum well InGaAs/AlGaAs lasers with a short cavity length and high reflectivity coatings
Very High Modulation Efficiency of Ultralow Threshold Current Single Quantum Well InGaAs Lasers
A record high current modulation efficiency of 5 GHz/[sqrt](mA) has been demonstrated in an ultralow threshold strained layer single quantum well InGaAs laser
A novel technique for the direct determination of carrier diffusion lengths in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures using cathodoluminescence
A new technique for determining carrier diffusion lengths
in direct gap semiconductors by cathodoluminescence measurement
is presented. Ambipolar diffusion lengths are
determined for GaAs quantum well material, bulk GaAs,
and Al_xGa_(1-x)As with x up to 0.38. A large increase in
the diffusion length is found as x approaches 0.38 and is
attributed to an order of magnitude increase in lifetime
Direct determination of the ambipolar diffusion length in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures by cathodoluminescence
A new technique for determining carrier diffusion lengths by cathodoluminescence measurements is presented. The technique is extremely accurate and can be applied to a variety of structures. Ambipolar diffusion lengths are determined for GaAs quantum well material, bulk GaAs, Al0.21Ga0.79As, and Al0.37Ga0.63As. A large increase in the diffusion length is found for Al0.37Ga0.63As and is attributed to an order of magnitude increase in lifetime
Markerless Video Analysis for Movement Quantification in Pediatric Epilepsy Monitoring
This paper proposes a markerless video analytic system for quantifying body part movements in pediatric epilepsy monitoring. The system utilizes colored pajamas worn by a patient in bed to extract body part movement trajectories, from which various features can be obtained for seizure detection and analysis. Hence, it is non-intrusive and it requires no sensor/marker to be attached to the patient’s body. It takes raw video sequences as input and a simple user-initialization indicates the body parts to be examined. In background/foreground modeling, Gaussian mixture models are employed in conjunction with HSV-based modeling. Body part detection follows a coarse-to-fine paradigm with graphcut-based segmentation. Finally, body part parameters are estimated with domain knowledge guidance. Experimental studies are reported on sequences captured in an Epilepsy Monitoring Unit at a local hospital. The results demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed system in pediatric epilepsy monitoring and seizure detection
Effect of Al mole fraction on carrier diffusion lengths and lifetimes in AlxGa1−xAs
The ambipolar diffusion length and carrier lifetime are measured in AlxGa1−xAs for several mole fractions in the interval 0<x<0.38. These parameters are found to have significantly higher values in the higher mole fraction samples. These increases are attributed to occupation of states in the indirect valleys, and supporting calculations are presented
Out of equilibrium electronic transport properties of a misfit cobaltite thin film
We report on transport measurements in a thin film of the 2D misfit Cobaltite
. Dc magnetoresistance measurements obey the modified
variable range hopping law expected for a soft Coulomb gap. When the sample is
cooled down, we observe large telegraphic-like fluctuations. At low
temperature, these slow fluctuations have non Gaussian statistics, and are
stable under a large magnetic field. These results suggest that the low
temperature state is a glassy electronic state. Resistance relaxation and
memory effects of pure magnetic origin are also observed, but without aging
phenomena. This indicates that these magnetic effects are not glassy-like and
are not directly coupled to the electronic part.Comment: accepted in Phys Rev B, Brief report
- …