Engineers
create new mirror for high-performance optics
13
February 2007
By Sarah Yang
The
high-index-contrast sub-wavelength grating (top image)
reflects 99.9 percent of light, the same reflectivity as the
much thicker distributed Bragg reflectors (bottom image).
Credit:
Michael Huang/UC Berkeley
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BERKELEY – Engineers
at the University of California, Berkeley, have created a new
high-performance mirror that could dramatically improve the
design and efficiency of the next generation of devices relying
upon laser optics, including high-definition DVD players,
computer circuits and laser printers.
The new mirror packs the same
99.9 percent reflective punch as current high-grade mirrors,
called distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs), but it does so in a
package that is at least 20 times thinner, functional in a
considerably wider spectrum of light frequencies, and easier to
manufacture. All these characteristics present critical
advantages for today's ever smaller integrated optical devices.
Connie J. Chang-Hasnain,
director of UC Berkeley's Center for Optoelectronic
Nanostructured Semiconductor Technologies, developed the
super-thin mirror, or "high-index contrast sub-wavelength
grating (HCG)," with her graduate students, Michael Huang
and Ye Zhou. Their work is described in this month's issue of the
journal Nature Photonics.
"Today's semiconductor
lasers demand mirrors that can deliver high reflectivity, but
without the extra thickness," said Chang-Hasnain, who is
also a UC Berkeley professor of electrical engineering and
computer science. "When you reduce the thickness of a
mirror, you are significantly reducing the mass of the device,
which also translates into lower power consumption. The mirror
we've developed overcomes the hurdles that have stalled the
advancement of certain lasers."
To get the coherent, single
wavelength light of a laser beam requires a pair of mirrors at
opposite ends of a photon-generating gain medium. Light photons
of a specific frequency bounce back and forth between the
mirrors, building up energy with each pass. As this effect levels
off, the gain is said to be saturated, and the light energy is
transferred into a laser beam.
Early versions of semiconductor
lasers used crystal for the mirrors, which yielded a mere 30
percent reflection. Such a low reflectivity is too inefficient
for vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSEL) - used in
short-range optical communications, optical mice for computers
and other applications requiring low power consumption. VCSELs
have a particularly short gain medium, so a highly reflective
mirror is needed.
High reflectivity can be
achieved with DBRs, in which light passes through alternating
layers of aluminum gallium arsenide, which has a refractive index
of 3.0, and gallium arsenide, which has a higher refractive index
of 3.6. The difference in refractive indices allows a small
amount of light to be reflected from each pair of alternating
layers. The light from the multiple layers adds up to form a
strongly reflected coherent beam.
"DBRs can reflect 99.9
percent of light, but it can take up to 80 layers of material to
achieve this high reflectivity," said Huang, lead author of
the paper. "The DBR ends up being a relatively thick 5
micrometers wide. The precision necessary for the layers also
requires a complicated manufacturing process. Our mirror is
thinner and will be easier to manufacture, which keeps the cost
low."
This
scanning electron micrograph image shows the grooves in the
high-index-contrast sub-wavelength grating developed by UC
Berkeley researchers.
Credit:
Michael Huang, UC Berkeley
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Instead of multiple levels
of alternating refractive-index layers, the HCG mirror developed
by the UC Berkeley engineers contains only one pair. In this
study, the engineers used aluminum gallium arsenide for the high
refractive index layer, coupled with a layer of air, which has a
very low refractive index of 1. In addition, the high refractive
index layer contained grooves spaced by a distance that is less
than a wavelength of light.
In this configuration, light
hitting the mirror surface was directed over the grooves. As the
light waves passed each semiconductor-air interface, they were
strongly reflected back in the opposite direction. The
researchers noted that other materials could replace air as the
low refractive index material. Silicon dioxide, for instance, has
a refractive index of 1.5.
To demonstrate the reflectivity
of the HCG, the researchers replaced one of the two DBRs in a
vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser with the new mirror. They
confirmed that the HCG is capable of providing reflectivity
greater than 99.9 percent, equivalent to the DBR.
"The HCG mirror overcomes
many of the hurdles that had slowed the advance of VCSEL
research," said study co-author Zhou. "In addition to
being thinner, it has the advantage of working in a broader range
of light frequencies."
The latter attribute is
particularly important as optical disc technologies increasingly
employ blue-violet lasers, which operate on a shorter wavelength
than red lasers. Shorter wavelengths make it possible to focus on
smaller units, enabling significantly higher density data
storage.
The engineers are also studying
applications for the mobile HCG mirror in micro-electromechanical
systems (MEMS), such as wavelength tunable lasers, which are used
in broadband communications.
"Reducing the size of the
laser's mirror also means a dramatic reduction in weight, which
is particularly important for high-speed MEMS devices," said
Chang-Hasnain.
The researchers added that it
may be possible to print this mirror on various surfaces, and
that it could one day be used to create organic, plastic displays
that can be rolled up for easy transport.
"There is a wide range of
products based upon laser optics that could benefit with this
thinner mirror," said Huang. "They include light
emitting diodes, photovoltaic devices, sensors, computer chips
and telecommunications equipment."
The Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency helped support this research.
Source
/ Credit: University of California, Berkeley
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