James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@illinois.edu
11/15/04
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
have demonstrated the laser operation of a heterojunction bipolar light-emitting
transistor. The scientists describe the fabrication and operation of
their transistor laser in the Nov. 15 issue of the journal Applied Physics
Letters.
“By incorporating quantum wells into the active region of a light-emitting
transistor, we have enhanced the electrical and optical properties,
making possible stimulated emission and transistor laser operation,”
said Nick Holonyak Jr., a John Bardeen Professor of Electrical
and Computer Engineering and Physics at Illinois.
The same principle making possible the transistor – negative and
positive charge annihilation in the active region (the source of one
of the transistor’s three currents) – has been extended
and employed to make a transistor laser, he said. Holonyak invented
the first practical light-emitting diode and the first semiconductor
laser to operate in the visible spectrum.
Unlike
a light-emitting diode, which sends out broadband, incoherent light,
the transistor laser emits a narrow, coherent beam. Modulated at transistor
speeds, the laser beam could be sent through an optical fiber as a high-speed
signal.
“This is a true, three-terminal laser, with an electrical input,
electrical output and an optical output, not to mention a coherent optical
output,” said Milton Feng, the Holonyak Professor of Electrical
and Computer Engineering at Illinois. “It is a device that operates
simultaneously as a laser and as a transistor.” Feng is credited
with creating the world’s fastest bipolar transistor, a device
that operates at a frequency of 509 gigahertz.
At laser threshold – where the light changes from spontaneous
emission to stimulated emission – the transistor gain decreases
sharply, but still supports three-port operation, Feng said. “The
electrical signal goes down, but the optical signal goes up.”
Earlier this year, Feng and Holonyak reported their discovery of a three-port,
light-emitting transistor. Building upon that work, the researchers
fabricated the transistor laser in the university’s Micro and
Nanotechnology Laboratory. Unlike traditional transistors, which are
built from silicon and germanium, the transistor laser is made from
indium gallium phosphide, gallium arsenide and indium gallium arsenide,
but can employ other materials in this family (the so-called III-V compounds).
“This work is still very much in its infancy,” Holonyak
said. “There is much more to be learned, including how to separate
and optimize the transistor laser output between electrical signals
and light signals.”
Down the road, ultra-fast transistor lasers could extend the modulation
bandwidth of a semiconductor light source from 20 gigahertz to more
than 100 gigahertz. Used as optoelectronic interconnects, transistor
lasers could facilitate faster signal processing, higher speed devices
and large-capacity seamless communications, as well as a new generation
of higher performance electrical and optical integrated circuits.
Co-authors of the paper with Feng and Holonyak are postdoctoral research
associate Gabriel Walter and graduate research assistant Richard Chan.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency funded the work.