Title: 6. Optoelectronic Devices
16. Optoelectronic Devices
2Optical Waveguides
(a) A buried-in rectangular waveguide, (b) a
buried-in rib waveguide, (c) a strip-loaded
waveguide, and (d) a diffused waveguide
3Some Fabrication Processes of Optical Waveguides
4Basic Theory of Waveguides
5Theory of Planar Optical Waveguides
6Approximate Theory of Rectangular Optical
Waveguides Surrounding by a Uniform Medium
7Approximate Theory of Rectangular Optical
Waveguides Surrounding by a Uniform Medium (Cont)
8Approximate Theory of Rectangular Optical
Waveguides Surrounding by a Uniform Medium (Cont)
9Applications of Y-Branches and Bends of
Conventional Optical Waveguides
10Multimode Interference (MMI) Devices
11Example of Optical Performance of MMI Device
121n MMI Optical Splitters
13All-optical Logic Gate Based on MMI Waveguide
14All-optical Logic Gate Based on MMI Waveguide
(Cont)
15All-optical Logic Gate Based on MMI Waveguide
(Cont)
16Photonic Crystals
17Square-lattice and Triangular-lattice Photonic
Crystals
18Band Structures of Photonic Crystals
Eg. The band structures of the 2D square-lattice
photonic crystal with the lattice constant is
a0.5µm. The radius of the pillar is Rc225nm.
And the refractive index of the pillar is
3.16227766.
19Photonic Crystals Improving LED Efficiency
- Incorporating a photonic crystal into an
indium-gallium-nitride (InGaN) LED increases both
the internal quantum efficiency and the amount of
light extracted. The light is produced in the
quantum-well (QW) active region.
20Photonic Crystals Improving LED Efficiency (Cont)
Far-field emission patterns from a conventional
(left) and a photonic-crystal LED (right) are
very different. The latter has a
strongly-modified emission pattern due to the
scattering of waveguided modes out of the LED
chip.
21Photonic Crystal Waveguides (PCWGs)
22Comparison between the Conventional Waveguides
and the PCWGs
- The conventional optical waveguides are weakly
guided. There exist large power losses in the
wide-angle bends/branches. However, the same
structures made of line-defect photonic crystals
give little losses because the lights were
trapped by the defects of the photonic crystals. - Most of the conventional optical waveguide
devices can be easily modulated by EO effect, AO
effect, and so on. But only a few photonic
crystal waveguide devices can be modulated.
23Periodical Dielectric Waveguides (PDWGs)
24Electro-Optic (EO) Effect
- The electro-optic (EO) effect is a nonlinear
optical effect that results in a refractive index
that is a function of the applied electric field
(voltage) - Examples of Pockels effect Ammonium dihydrogen
phosphate (ADP), Potassium dihydrogen phosphate
(KDP), Lithium Niobate, Lithium Tantalate, etc. - Examples of Kerr effect Most glasses, gases, and
some crystals
Pockels effect
Kerr effect
25Phase Modulators
- Phase shift
- , where Vp (the half-wave voltage) is the voltage
applied to achieve a phase shift of p radians.
26Mach-Zehnder Modulator to Modulate Amplitude of
Light
Output Intensity
Consider the case of f00. If VVp, then PoutPin
is the maximum, else if V0, then Pout0 is the
minimum.
27Characteristics of Optical Modulators/Switches
- Extinction Ratio ?(I0-Im)/I0 if Im?I0 and
?(Im-I0)/Im if Im?I0, where Im is the optical
intensity when the maximum signal is applied to
the modulator and I0 is the optical intensity
with no signal applied. - Insertion Loss Li10log(It/Im), where It is the
transmitted intensity with no modulator and Im is
the transmitted intensity when the maximum signal
is applied to the modulator. - Bandwith ?f2p/T, where T is the switching time.
28Optical Directional Coupler as a Channel Switch
29A Complicated Optical Directional Coupler
303dB-Directional Coupler as a Beam Splitter
31Coupled-Mode Equations to Analyze Directional
Coupler
32Coupled-Mode Equations (Cont)
- The coupling length is Lcp/2?. Both Lc and ?
depend on the refractive index distribution of
guide. - While the waveguiding mode traverses a distance
of odd multiple of the coupling length (Lc, 3Lc,
, etc), the optical power is completely
transferred into the other waveguide. But it is
back to the original waveguide after a distance
of even multiple of the coupling lengths (2Lc,
4Lc, , etc). If the waveguiding mode traverses a
distance of odd multiple of the half coupling
length (Lc/2, 3Lc/2, , etc), the optical power
is equally distributed in the two guides.
33Acousto-Optic (AO) Modulators
Bragg-type Width gtgt ?2/? Raman-Nath-type Width
ltlt ?2/? ? wavelength of light ? wavelength of
acoustic wave
Bragg-type AO modulator sin?B?/2?
Raman-Nath type AO modulator sin?mm?/2?, m
integer
34Bragg-type AO Modulator as Spectrum Analyzer
Acousto-optic materials Visible and NIR Flint
glass, TeO2, fused quartz Infrared Ge High
frequency LiNbO3, GaP
Operations of Bragg-type AO modulator Bragg
diffraction effect Driving frequency 1MHz
1GHz Rise time 150 ns (1-mm diameter laser)
35Direct Coupling from Laser/Fiber to Waveguide
- Direct Coupling Efficiency
where is the laser/fiber mode and
is the waveguide mode.
36Coupling Efficiency from Laser/Fiber to Waveguide
37Coupling Efficiency from Laser/Fiber to Waveguide
(Cont)
38Coupling Efficiency from Laser/Fiber to Waveguide
(Cont)
39Simulation Results Coupling Efficiency from
Laser/Fiber to Waveguide
For given waveguides fundamental mode, one can
obtained the optimal coupling efficiency by
selecting the values of w and c.
40Typical Optical Disks
41DVD Disks
42Lasers in DVD Players
43Optoelectronic Devices in DVD Players
44Band Theory of Semiconductor Devices
- Metal The conduction band and the valence band
may overlap. - Semiconductor The bandgap between the conduction
band and the valence band is very small. The
electron can be easily excited into the
conduction band to become a free electron. - Insulator The bandgap between the conduction
band and the valence band is very large. The
electron is hardly excited into the conduction
band to become a free electron.
45Semiconductor
Fermi energy level, EF the highest energy level
which an electron can occupy the valance band at
0k
46Bandgap Theory of Diode
47Bandgap Theory of Tunnel Diode
48Bandgap Theory of n-p-n Transistor
49- Radiation from a Semiconductor Junction
50Homojunction Laser Diode
51Formation of Cavity in Laser Diode
52Threshold Current
53Heterostructure Laser Diodes
54Stripe AlGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs LD
- Advantages of stripe geometry
- 1. reduced contact area ? Ith?
- 2. reduced emission area, easier coupling
to optical fibers - Typical W a few µm, Ith tens of mA
- Poor lateral optical confinement of photons
55Buried Double Heterostructure LD
- Good lateral optical confinement by lower
refractive index material ?stimulated emission
rate ? - Active region confined to the waveguide defined
by the refractive index variation ? index guided
laser diode - Buried DH with right dimensions compared with the
? of radiation ? only fundamental mode can exist?
single mode laser diode - DH AlGaAs/GaAs LD
- ? 900 nm LD
- DH InGaAsP/InP LD ? 1.3/1.55 µm LD
56Output Modes of LD
- Output spectrum depends on
- 1. optical gain curve of the active medium
- 2. nature of the optical resonator
- L decides longitudinal mode separation. W H
decides lateral mode separation - With sufficiently small W H?only TEM00 lateral
mode will exist ( longitudinal modes depends on L
) - Diffraction at the cavity ends ?laser beam
divergence ( aperture ??diffraction ?)
57Current Dependence of Power Spectrum in LD
- Output spectrum depends on
- 1. optical gain curve of the active
medium, and - 2. nature of the optical resonator
- Output spectrum from an index guided LD
- low current ?multimode
- high current ?single mode
58Light Detectors
- Classification by spectral response
- wide spectral response
- narrow spectral response
- Principles of photodetection
- ? External photoelectric effect
- Eg. vacuum photodiode
- photomultiplier
- Internal photoelectric effect
- Eg. p-n junction photodiode
- PIN photodiode
- avalanche photodiode
59- Characteristics of Light Detectors
60- External Photoelectric Detector ? Vacuum
Photodiode
61- External Photoelectric Detector? Photomultiplier
62- Internal Photoelectric Detector (Semiconductor
Photodiode)
P-N photodiode
63- PIN and Avalanche Photodiodes
Operating modes (1) photoconductive mode
(reverse biased) (2) Photovoltaic mode (forward
biased)
64Typical Characteristics of Photodetectors
65- Principle of OP Circuit for Photodiodes
66Light Emitting Diode (LED)
Construction
Optical design
67Choice of LED Materials
68Typical Choice of Materials for LEDs
69Radiative Transition Through Isoelectronic
Centers
- For indirect band-gap semiconductors?use
recombination of bound excitons at isoelectronic
centers to generate radiative recombination - Isoelectronic center produced by replacing one
host atom in the crystal with another kind of
atom having the same number of valence electrons - Isoelectronic center attract electron and hole
pair ? exciton radiative recombination can occur
without phonon assistance ? h?slightly smaller
than bandgap energy Eg - Common isoelectronic centers
- N in GaP ? 565 nm
- N in GaAs0.35P0.65 ? 632 nm
- N in GaAs0.15P0.85 ? 589 nm
- ZnO pair in GaP ( neutral molecular center ) ?
700 nm
70Choice of Substrates for Red and Yellow LEDs
71Material System for High Brightness Red/Yellow
LEDs
72Choice of Substrates for Blue LEDs
- Choices of light emitting material for blue LEDs
( before 1994 ) GaN system, ZnSe system, SiC,
etc. And the winner is GaN
73Earlier LED Structures
74Basic Structures of High Brightness Visible LEDs
75High Brightness Blue LEDs
76Output spectra
Radiation pattern
Note response time 90ns (yellow
and red LED) 500ns (green LED)