651 research outputs found
Improving the Reliability and Modal Stability of High Power 870 nm AlGaAs CSP Laser Diodes for Applications to Free Space Communication Systems
The operating characteristics (power-current, beam divergence, etc.) and reliability assessment of high-power CSP lasers is discussed. The emission wavelength of these lasers was optimized at 860 to 880 nm. The operational characteristics of a new laser, the inverse channel substrate planar (ICSP) laser, grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), is discussed and the reliability assessment of this laser is reported. The highlights of this study include a reduction in the threshold current value for the laser to 15 mA and a degradation rate of less than 2 kW/hr for the lasers operating at 60 mW of peak output power
Analysis of S-band solid-state transmitters for the solar power satellite
The possibility of replacing the Reference System antenna in which thermionic devices are used for the dc-to-microwave conversion, with solid-state elements was explored. System, device, and antenna module tradeoff investigations strongly point toward the desirability of changing the transmitter concept to a distributed array of relatively low power elements, deriving their dc power directly from the solar cell array and whose microwave power outputs are combined in space. The approach eliminates the thermal, weight, and dc-voltage distribution problems of a system in which high power tubes are simply replaced with clusters of solid state amplifiers. The proposed approach retains the important advantages of a solid state system: greatly enhanced reliability and graceful degradation of the system
AlGaAs heterojunction lasers
The characterization of 8300 A lasers was broadened, especially in the area of beam quality. Modulation rates up to 2 Gbit/sec at output powers of 20 mW were observed, waveform fidelity was fully adequate for low BER data transmission, and wavefront measurements showed that phase aberrations were less than lamda/50. Also, individually addressable arrays of up to ten contiguous diode lasers were fabricated and tested. Each laser operates at powers up to 30 mW CW in single spatial mode. Shifting the operating wavelength of the basic CSP laser from 8300 A to 8650 A was accomplished by the addition of Si to the active region. Output power has reached 100 mW single mode, with excellent far field wave front properties. Operating life is currently approx. 1000 hrs at 35 mW CW. In addition, laser reliability, for operation at both 8300 A and 8650 A, has profited significantly from several developments in the processing procedures
Semiconductor structure and devices
Semiconductor devices such as lasers which include a substrate with a channel therein with a clad layer overlying the substrate and filling the channel exhibit irregularities such as terraces in the surface of the clad layer which are detrimental to device performance. These irregularities are substantially eliminated by forming the channel in a surface of a buffer layer greater than about 4 micrometers thick on the substrate and forming the clad layer over the buffer layer and the channel. CW lasers incorporating the principles of the invention exhibit the highest output power in a single spatial mode and maximum output power which have been observed to date
Vapor-phase growth technique and system for several III-V compound semiconductors Interim scientific report
Vapor phase growth technique for III-V compound semiconductors containing aluminu
High-power AlGaAs channeled substrate planar diode lasers for spaceborne communications
A high power channeled substrate planar AlGaAs diode laser with an emission wavelength of 8600 to 8800 A was developed. The optoelectronic behavior (power current, single spatial and spectral behavior, far field characteristics, modulation, and astigmatism properties) and results of computer modeling studies on the performance of the laser are discussed. Lifetest data on these devices at high output power levels is also included. In addition, a new type of channeled substrate planar laser utilizing a Bragg grating to stabilize the longitudinal mode was demonstrated. The fabrication procedures and optoelectronic properties of this new diode laser are described
Synthesis and thermoelectric characterization of Bi2Te3 nanoparticles
We report a novel synthesis for near monodisperse, sub-10-nm Bi2Te3
nanoparticles. At first, a new reduction route to bismuth nanoparticles is
described which are applied as starting materials in the formation of
rhombohedral Bi2Te3 nanoparticles. After ligand removal by a novel hydrazine
hydrate etching procedure, the nanoparticle powder is spark plasma sintered to
a pellet with preserved crystal grain sizes. Unlike previous works on the
properties of Bi2Te3 nanoparticles, the full thermoelectric characterization of
such sintered pellets shows a highly reduced thermal conductivity and the same
electric conductivity as bulk n-type Bi2Te3.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
High-speed 2D and 3D mid-IR imaging with an InGaAs camera
Recent work on mid-infrared (MIR) detection through the process of
non-degenerate two-photon absorption (NTA) in semiconducting materials has
shown that wide-field MIR imaging can be achieved with standard Si cameras.
While this approach enables MIR imaging at high pixel densities, the low
nonlinear absorption coefficient of Si prevents fast NTA-based imaging at lower
illumination doses. Here we overcome this limitation by using InGaAs as the
photosensor. Taking advantage of the much higher nonlinear absorption
coefficient of this direct bandgap semiconductor, we demonstrate high-speed MIR
imaging up to 500 fps with under 1 ms exposure per frame, enabling 2D or 3D
mapping without pre- or post-processing of the image.Comment: 7 pages, 5 Figure
Semiconducting Polymer Photodetectors with Electron and Hole Blocking Layers: High Detectivity in the Near-Infrared
Sensing from the ultraviolet-visible to the infrared is critical for a variety of industrial and scientific applications. Photodetectors with broad spectral response, from 300 nm to 1,100 nm, were fabricated using a narrow-band gap semiconducting polymer blended with a fullerene derivative. By using both an electron-blocking layer and a hole-blocking layer, the polymer photodetectors, operating at room temperature, exhibited calculated detectivities greater than 1013 cm Hz1/2/W over entire spectral range with linear dynamic range approximately 130 dB. The performance is comparable to or even better than Si photodetectors
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