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8: Semiconductor Saturable Absorbers

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    So far we only considered artificial saturable absorbers, but there is of course the possibility to use real absorbers for modelocking. A prominent candidate for a saturable absorber is semiconductor material, which was pioneered by Islam, Knox and Keller [1][2][3] The great advantage of using semiconductor materials is that the wavelength range over which these absorbers operate can be chosen by material composition and bandstructure engineering, if semiconductor heterostructures are used (see Figure 8.1). Even though, the basic physics of carrier dynamics in these structures is to a large extent well understood [4], the actual development of semiconductor saturable absorbers for mode locking is still very much ongoing.

    Image removed due to copyright restrictions. Please see: Keller, U., Ultrafast Laser Physics, Institute of Quantum Electronics, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH Hönggerberg—HPT, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland. Used with permission. Figure 8.1: Energy Gap, corresponding wavelength and lattice constant for various compound semiconductors. The dashed lines indicate indirect transitions.

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    Figure 8.2: Typical semiconductor saturable absorber structure. A semicon-ductor heterostruture (here AlAs/GaAs) is grown on a GaAs-Wafer (20-40 pairs). The layer thicknesses are chosen to be quarter wave at the center wavelength at which the laser operates. This structures acts as quarter-wave Braggmirror. On top of the Bragg mirror a half-wave thick layer of the low index material (here AlAs) is grown, which has a field-maximum in its center. At the field maximum either a bulk layer of GaAlAs or a single-or multiple Quantum Well (MQW) structure is embedded, which acts as saturable absorber for the operating wavelength of the laser. Figure by MIT OCW.

    A typical semiconductor saturable absorber structure is shown in Figure 8.2. A semiconductor heterostruture (here AlAs/GaAs) is grown on a GaAs- Wafer (20-40 pairs). The layer thicknesses are chosen to be quarter wave at the center wavelength at which the laser operates. These structures act as quarter-wave Bragg mirror. On top of the Bragg mirror, a half-wave thick layer of the low index material (here AlAs) is grown, which has a field-maximum in its center. At the field maximum, either a bulk layer of a compound semiconductor or a single-or multiple Quantum Well (MQW) structure is embedded, which acts as a saturable absorber for the operating wavelength of the laser. The absorber mirror serves as one of the endmirrors in the laser (see Figure 8.3).

    截屏2021-06-17 下午8.09.14.png
    Figure 8.3: The semiconductor saturable absorber, mounted on a heat sink, is used as one of the cavity end mirrors. A curved mirror determines the spot-size of the laser beam on the saturable absorber and, therefore, scales the energy fluence on the absorber at a given intracavity energy.


    This page titled 8: Semiconductor Saturable Absorbers is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Franz X. Kaertner (MIT OpenCourseWare) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.