We have achieved continuous‐wave (CW) operation of gallium nitride (GaN)‐based vertical‐cavity surface‐emitting lasers (VCSELs) fabricated by epitaxial lateral overgrowth (ELO) using dielectric distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) as masks for selective growth. The GaN VCSELs exhibited CW operation at a wavelength of 453.9 nm, and the maximum output power was 1.1 mW, which is the highest value reported to date. GaN‐based materials have presented challenges for obtaining DBRs with high reflectivity and a wide stopband, precise control of the cavity length and a lateral confinement structure to provide laser operation. The proposed VCSEL is immune to these concerns. Its two dielectric DBRs were obtained free from cracks. A high reflectance of more than 99.9% and a stopband with a width of 80–97 nm were obtained for both DBRs. The cavity length was controlled by epitaxial growth to as short as 4.5 µm. An ITO contact electrode on p‐type GaN, which is required for a lateral confinement structure, showed electrical reliability under a high current density of 59.6 kA cm−2. The present data demonstrate that the fabrication process adopted here overcomes the shortcomings that have prevented the widespread use of GaN‐based VCSELs.
We have successfully demonstrated the room-temperature continuous-wave operation of GaN-based vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) with all-dielectric reflectors, which were fabricated using epitaxial lateral overgrowth. The VCSELs exhibited a threshold current of 8 mA and a threshold voltage of 4.5 V at a lasing wavelength of 446 nm. The maximum output power was 0.9 mW for an 8-µm-diameter current aperture, which was made possible because of the high thermal conductivity of the GaN substrate.
Plasma-induced damage (PID) due to Cl2/SiCl4/Ar plasma etching of the GaN capping layer (CAP)/GaInN single quantum well (SQW)/GaN structure was investigated by conventional photoluminescence (PL), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and time-resolved and temperature-dependent photoluminescence (TRPL). SQW PL intensity remained constant initially, although plasma etching of the CAP layer proceeded, but when the etching thickness reached a certain amount (∼60 nm above the SQW), PL intensity started to decrease sharply. On the other hand, TEM observations show that the physical damage (structural damage) was limited to the topmost surface region. These findings can be explained by the results of TRPL studies, which revealed that there exist two different causes of PID. One is an increase in the number of nonradiative recombination centers, which mainly affects the PL intensity. The other is an increase in the quantum level fluctuation owing mainly to physical damage.
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