A fully microscopic many-body Maxwell-semiconductor Bloch model is used to investigate the influence of the non-equilibrium carrier dynamics on the short-pulse amplification in mode-locked semiconductor microlaser systems. The numerical solution of the coupled equations allows for a self-consistent investigation of the light-matter coupling dynamics, the carrier kinetics in the saturable absorber and the multiple-quantum-well gain medium, as well as the modification of the light field through the pulse-induced optical polarization. The influence of the pulse-induced non-equilibrium modifications of the carrier distributions in the gain medium and the saturable absorber on the single-pulse amplification in the laser cavity is identified. It is shown that for the same structure, quantum wells, and gain bandwidth the non-equilibrium carrier dynamics lead to two preferred operation regimes: one with pulses in the (sub-)100 fs-regime and one with multi-picosecond pulses. The recovery time of the saturable absorber determines in which regime the device operates.
CITATION STYLE
Böttge, C. N., Hader, J., Kilen, I., Moloney, J. V., & Koch, S. W. (2014). Ultrafast pulse amplification in mode-locked vertical external-cavity surface-emitting lasers. Applied Physics Letters, 105(26). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4905203
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