Unit III

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OPTICAL SOURCE

• Optical source are active components whose


fundamental function is to convert electrical energy
to optical energy.
• Light output is highly directional.
• Requires low power for operation.
• Optical output stable irrespective of temperature.
• Narrow radiation pattern (beam width)
• Linearity (output light power proportional to driving
current)
• Fast response time (wide band)
Review of Semiconductor Physics

k B  1.38 10 23 JK -1


a) Energy level diagrams showing the excitation of an electron from the valence band to the conduction band.
The resultant free electron can freely move under the application of electric field.
b) Equal electron & hole concentrations in an intrinsic semiconductor created by the thermal excitation of
electrons across the band gap
Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000
Direct band gap material

Electrons and holes move with same momentum value hence


emits photons.
Indirect band gap material

Conduction band with minimum energy and valance band


with maximum energy emmits phonons.
Light-Emitting Diodes (LEDs)

• For photonic communications requiring data rate 100-200 Mb/s


with multimode fiber with tens of microwatts, LEDs are usually
the best choice.
• LED configurations being used in photonic communications:
1- Surface Emitters (Front Emitters)
2- Edge Emitters
Heterojunction

• Heterojunction structure are used to achieve


carrier and optical confinement.

• Heterojunction is the advanced junction


design to reduce diffraction loss in the optical
cavity.

• Uses two adjoining semiconductor material


at different band gap

• Electron hole recombination occursin the


InGaAsP active region when forward biased.
Cross-section drawing of a typical
GaAlAs double heterostructure light
emitter. In this structure, x>y to provide
for both carrier confinement and optical
guiding.
b) Energy-band diagram showing the
active region, the electron & hole
barriers which confine the charge carriers
to the active layer.
c) Variations in the refractive index; the
lower refractive index of the material in
regions 1 and 5 creates an optical barrier
around the waveguide because of the higher
band-gap energy of this material.

1.240
 ( m)  [4-3]
E g (eV)

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


Surface-Emitting LED

Schematic of high-radiance surface-emitting LED. The active region is limitted


to a circular cross section that has an area compatible with the fiber-core end face.

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


Edge-Emitting LED

Schematic of an edge-emitting double heterojunction LED. The output beam is


lambertian in the plane of junction and highly directional perpendicular to pn junction.
They have high quantum efficiency & fast response.
Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000
Light Source Material
• Most of the light sources contain III-V ternary & quaternary
compounds.
• Ga 1 x Al x As by varying x it is possible to control the band-gap
energy and thereby the emission wavelength over the range of
800 nm to 900 nm. The spectral width is around 20 to 40 nm.
• In1 x Ga x As y P1 y By changing 0<x<0.47; y is approximately 2.2x,
the emission wavelength can be controlled over the range of
920 nm to 1600 nm. The spectral width varies from 70 nm to
180 nm when the wavelength changes from 1300 nm to 1600
nm. These materials are lattice matched.
Spectral width of LED types

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


Rate equations, Quantum Efficiency & Power of
LEDs
• When there is no external carrier injection, the excess density
decays exponentially due to electron-hole recombination.

n(t )  n0 e  t / [4-4]

• n is the excess carrier density,

n0 : initial injected excess electron density


 : carrier lifetime.
• Bulk recombination rate R:

n
R [4-5]


• Bulk recombination rate (R)=Radiative recombination rate +
nonradiative recombination rate
bulk recombination rate ( R  1/τ ) 
radiative recombinat ion rate ( Rr  1/τ r )  nonradiati ve recombination rate( Rnr  1/τ nr )

With an external supplied current density of J the rate equation for the electron-hole
recombination is:

dn(t ) J n
  [4-6]
dt qd 
q : charge of the electron; d : thickness of recombination region
In equilibrium condition: dn/dt=0

J
n [4-7]
qd
Internal Quantum Efficiency & Optical Power

Rr  nr 
int    [4-8]
Rr  Rnr  r   nr  r
int : internal quantum efficiency in the active region

Optical power generated internally in the active region in the LED is:

I hcI
Pint  int h  int [4-9]
q q
Pint : Internal optical power,
I : Injected current to active region
External Quantum Eficiency

Total number of photons emitted from LED


 ext  [4-10]
Total number of internally generated photons

• In order to calculate the external quantum efficiency, we need to


consider the reflection effects at the surface of the LED. If we
consider the LED structure as a simple 2D slab waveguide, only
light falling within a cone defined by critical angle will be emitted
from an LED.
1
If n2  1  ext 
n1 (n1  1) 2

Pint
LED emitted optical powr, P  ext Pint 
n1 (n1  1) 2
Modulation of LED
• The frequency response of an LED depends on:
1- Doping level in the active region
2- Injected carrier lifetime in the recombination region, i .
3- Parasitic capacitance of the LED
• If the drive current of an LED is modulated at a frequency of 
the output optical power of the device will vary as:
P0
P ( )  [4-15]

1  ( i ) 2
• Electrical current is directly proportional to the optical power,
thus we can define electrical bandwidth and optical bandwidth,
separately.
 p()   I() 
Electrical BW  10log    20 log  I ( 0) 
[4-16]

 p ( 0)   
p : electrical power, I : electrical current
 P( )   I ( ) 
Optical BW  10 log    10 log   [4-17]

 P ( 0)   I ( 0) 

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


LASER
(Light Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation)

• Laser is an optical oscillator. It comprises a resonant optical


amplifier whose output is fed back into its input with matching
phase. Any oscillator contains:
1- An amplifier with a gain-saturated mechanism
2- A feedback system
3- A frequency selection mechanism
4- An output coupling scheme
• In laser the amplifier is the pumped active medium, such as biased
semiconductor region, feedback can be obtained by placing active
medium in an optical resonator, such as Fabry-Perot structure, two
mirrors separated by a prescribed distance. Frequency selection is
achieved by resonant amplifier and by the resonators, which
admits certain modes. Output coupling is accomplished by making
one of the resonator mirrors partially transmitting.
Pumped active medium
• Three main process for laser action:
1- Photon absorption
2- Spontaneous emission
3- Stimulated emission

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


Lasing in a pumped active medium

• In thermal equilibrium the stimulated emission is essentially


negligible, since the density of electrons in the excited state is
very small, and optical emission is mainly because of the
spontaneous emission. Stimulated emission will exceed
absorption only if the population of the excited states is greater
than that of the ground state. This condition is known as
Population Inversion. Population inversion is achieved by
various pumping techniques.

• In a semiconductor laser, population inversion is accomplished


by injecting electrons into the material to fill the lower energy
states of the conduction band.
Fabry-Perot Resonator
Relative intensity
M1 M2 m=1
A 1 f R ~ 0.8
m=2 R ~ 0.4
 m
B
L m=8 
m - 1 m m + 1
(a) (b) (c)
Resonant modes : kL  m m  1,2,3,..
Schematic illustration of the Fabry-Perot optical cavity and its properties. (a) Reflected
waves interfere. (b) Only standing EM waves, modes, of certain wavelengths are allowed
in the cavity. (c) Intensity vs. frequency for various modes. R is mirror reflectance and
lower R means higher loss from the cavity.

© 1999 S.O. Kasap, Optoelectronics (Prentice Hall)

(1  R) 2
I trans  I inc [4-18]
(1  R ) 2  4 R sin 2 (kL)
R: reflectance of the optical intensity, k: optical wavenumber
Laser Diode
• Laser diode is an improved LED, in the sense that uses stimulated
emission in semiconductor from optical transitions between distribution
energy states of the valence and conduction bands with optical
resonator structure such as Fabry-Perot resonator with both optical
and carrier confinements.

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


Laser Diode Characteristics

• Nanosecond & even picosecond response time (GHz BW)


• Spectral width of the order of nm or less
• High output power (tens of mW)
• Narrow beam (good coupling to single mode fibers)

• Laser diodes have three distinct radiation modes namely,


longitudinal, lateral and transverse modes.

• In laser diodes, end mirrors provide strong optical feedback in


longitudinal direction, so by roughening the edges and cleaving
the facets, the radiation can be achieved in longitudinal direction
rather than lateral direction.
DFB(Distributed FeedBack) Lasers
• In DFB lasers, the optical resonator structure is due to the incorporation
of Bragg grating or periodic variations of the refractive index into
multilayer structure along the length of the diode.

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,G.Keiser,McGrawHill, 2000


Laser Operation & Lasing Condition
• To determine the lasing condition and resonant frequencies, we
should focus on the optical wave propagation along the
longitudinal direction, z-axis. The optical field intensity, I, can be
written as:
[4-19]

I ( z , t )  I ( z )e j (t  z )

• Lasing is the condition at which light amplification becomes


possible by virtue of population inversion. Then, stimulated
emission rate into a given EM mode is proportional to the
intensity of the optical radiation in that mode. In this case, the
loss and gain of the optical field in the optical path determine the
lasing condition. The radiation intensity of a photon at energy h
varies exponentially with a distance z amplified by factor g,

and attenuated by factor according to the following
relationship:
Laser Diode Structure & Radiation Pattern

• Efficient operation of a laser diode requires reducing the # of


lateral modes, stabilizing the gain for lateral modes as well as
lowering the threshold current. These are met by structures that
confine the optical wave, carrier concentration and current flow
in the lateral direction. The important types of laser diodes are:
gain-induced, positive index guided, and negative index
guided.
(a) gain-induced guide (b)positive-index waveguide (c)negative-index waveguide
Laser Diode with buried heterostructure (BH)
Selectively Diffused and
Varying Thickness structure
Bent Layer Structure
Single Mode Laser
• Single mode laser is mostly based on the index-guided
structure that supports only the fundamental transverse
mode and the fundamental longitudinal mode. In order
to make single mode laser we have four options:
1- Reducing the length of the cavity to the point where
the frequency separation given in eq[4-31] of the
adjacent modes is larger than the laser transition line
width. This is hard to handle for fabrication and results
in low output power.
2- Vertical-Cavity Surface Emitting laser (VCSEL)
3- Structures with built-in frequency selective grating
4- tunable laser diodes
.
VCSEL
Frequency-Selective laser Diodes:
Distributed Feedback (DFB) laser

2ne 
B  [4-33]

k
Frequency-Selective laser Diodes:
Distributed Feedback Reflector (DBR) laser
B
2
1
  B  (m  )
2ne Le 2
[4-35]

Output spectrum symmetrically distributed around Bragg wavelength in an idealized DFB laser diode
Frequency-Selective laser Diodes:
Distributed Reflector (DR) laser
Modulation of Laser Diodes
• Internal Modulation: Simple but suffers from non-linear effects.
• External Modulation: for rates greater than 2 Gb/s, more
complex, higher performance.
• Most fundamental limit for the modulation rate is set by the
photon life time in the laser cavity:

1 c 1 1  c
   ln   g th
 ph
[4-36]
n 2 L R1 R2  n
• Another fundamental limit on modulation frequency is the
relaxation oscillation frequency given by:
1/ 2
1 1  I 
f    1 [4-37]
2  sp ph  I th 
Relaxation oscillation peak
Pulse Modulated laser
• In a pulse modulated laser, if the laser is completely turned off
after each pulse, after onset of the current pulse, a time
t d delay,
given by:

 Ip 
t d   ln   [4-38]

 I p  ( I B  I th ) 

 : carrier life time I p : Current pulse amplitude


I B : Bias current
Temperature variation of the threshold
current
I th (T )  I z e T / T0
Linearity of Laser

Information carrying LED or Laser diode


electrical signal s(t) modulator

Optical putput power:


P(t)=P[1+ms(t)]
Nonlinearity

x(t) Nonlinear function y=f(x) y(t)

x(t )  A cos t
y (t )  A0  A1 cos t  A2 cos 2t  ...

Nth order harmonic distortion:

 An 
20 log 
 A1 
Intermodulation Distortion

x(t )  A1 cos 1t  A2 cos  2 t 


y (t )   Bmn cos(m1  n 2 )t m,n  0,1,2,...
m,n

Harmonics:
n 1 , m 2
Intermodulated Terms:

1   2 ,21   2 , 1  2 2 ,...
Laser Noise

• Modal (speckel) Noise: Fluctuations in the distribution of


energy among various modes.
• Mode partition Noise: Intensity fluctuations in the longitudinal
modes of a laser diode, main source of noise in single mode
fiber systems.
• Reflection Noise: Light output gets reflected back from the fiber
joints into the laser, couples with lasing modes, changing their
phase, and generate noise peaks. Isolators & index matching
fluids can eliminate these reflections.

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