UC BERKELEY (US) — Engineers have found a way to grow nanolasers directly onto a silicon surface, paving the way for highly efficient silicon photonics.
“Ultimately, this technique may provide a powerful and new avenue for engineering on-chip nanophotonic devices such as lasers, photodetectors, modulators, and solar cells,” says study lead author Roger Chen, a graduate student in electrical engineering and computer sciences at the University of California, Berkeley.
Chen and colleagues describe their work in a paper to be published Feb. 6 in an advanced online issue of the journal Nature Photonics.
The increasing performance demands of electronics have sent researchers in search of better ways to harness the inherent ability of light particles to carry far more data than electrical signals can. Optical interconnects are seen as a solution to overcoming the communications bottleneck within and between computer chips.
Because silicon, the material that forms the foundation of modern electronics, is extremely deficient at generating light, engineers have turned to another class of materials known as III-V (pronounced “three-five”) semiconductors to create light-based components such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and lasers.
But the researchers pointed out that marrying III-V with silicon to create a single optoelectronic chip has been problematic. For one, the atomic structures of the two materials are mismatched.
“Growing III-V semiconductor films on silicon is like forcing two incongruent puzzle pieces together,” says study lead author Roger Chen, a UC Berkeley graduate student in electrical engineering and computer sciences. “It can be done, but the material gets damaged in the process.”
Moreover, the manufacturing industry is set up for the production of silicon-based materials, so for practical reasons, the goal has been to integrate the fabrication of III-V devices into the existing infrastructure, the researchers say.
“Today’s massive silicon electronics infrastructure is extremely difficult to change for both economic and technological reasons, so compatibility with silicon fabrication is critical,” says Chang-Hasnain. “One problem is that growth of III-V semiconductors has traditionally involved high temperatures—700 degrees Celsius or more—that would destroy the electronics. Meanwhile, other integration approaches have not been scalable.”
The researchers overcame this limitation by finding a way to grow nanopillars made of indium gallium arsenide, a III-V material, onto a silicon surface at the relatively cool temperature of 400 degrees Celsius.
“Working at nanoscale levels has enabled us to grow high quality III-V materials at low temperatures such that silicon electronics can retain their functionality,” says Chen.
Shown is a schematic (left) and various scanning electron microscope images of nanolasers grown directly on a silicon surface. The achievement could lead to a new class of optoelectronic chips. (Credit: Connie Chang-Hasnain Group, UC Berkeley)
The researchers used metal-organic chemical vapor deposition to grow the nanopillars on the silicon. “This technique is potentially mass manufacturable, since such a system is already used commercially to make thin film solar cells and light emitting diodes,” says Chang-Hasnain.
Once the nanopillar was made, the researchers showed that it could generate near infrared laser light—a wavelength of about 950 nanometers—at room temperature. The hexagonal geometry dictated by the crystal structure of the nanopillars creates a new, efficient, light-trapping optical cavity. Light circulates up and down the structure in a helical fashion and amplifies via this optical feedback mechanism.
Researchers note that the miniscule dimensions of the nanopillars—smaller than one wavelength on each side, in some cases—make it possible to pack them into small spaces with the added benefit of consuming very little energy
“This research has the potential to catalyze an optoelectronics revolution in computing, communications, displays and optical signal processing. In the future, we expect to improve the characteristics of these lasers and ultimately control them electronically for a powerful marriage between photonic and electronic devices,” says Chang-Hasnain.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and a Department of Defense National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellowship helped support this research.
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