Abstract
Strained GeSn alloys are promising for realizing light emitters based entirely on group IV elements. Here, we report GeSn microdisk lasers encapsulated with a SiNx stressor layer to produce tensile strain. A 300 nm-thick GeSn layer with 5.4 at% Sn, which is an indirect-bandgap semiconductor as-grown, is transformed via tensile strain engineering into a direct-bandgap semiconductor that supports lasing. In this approach, the low Sn concentration enables improved defect engineering and the tensile strain delivers a low density of states at the valence band edge, which is the light hole band. We observe ultra-low-threshold continuous-wave and pulsed lasing at temperatures up to 70 K and 100 K, respectively. Lasers operating at a wavelength of 2.5 μm have thresholds of 0.8 kW cm−2 for nanosecond pulsed optical excitation and 1.1 kW cm−2 under continuous-wave optical excitation. The results offer a path towards monolithically integrated group IV laser sources on a Si photonics platform.
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CITATION STYLE
Elbaz, A., Buca, D., von den Driesch, N., Pantzas, K., Patriarche, G., Zerounian, N., … El Kurdi, M. (2020). Ultra-low-threshold continuous-wave and pulsed lasing in tensile-strained GeSn alloys. Nature Photonics, 14(6), 375–382. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-020-0601-5
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