Content area

Abstract

Realizing large-scale single-mode, high-power, high-beam-quality semiconductor lasers, which rival (or even replace) bulky gas and solid-state lasers, is one of the ultimate goals of photonics and laser physics. Conventional high-power semiconductor lasers, however, inevitably suffer from poor beam quality owing to the onset of many-mode oscillation and, moreover, the oscillation is destabilized by disruptive thermal effects under continuous-wave (CW) operation. Here, we surmount these challenges by developing large-scale photonic-crystal surface-emitting lasers with controlled Hermitian and non-Hermitian couplings inside the photonic crystal and a pre-installed spatial distribution of the lattice constant, which maintains these couplings even under CW conditions. A CW output power exceeding 50 W with purely single-mode oscillation and an exceptionally narrow beam divergence of 0.05° has been achieved for photonic-crystal surface-emitting lasers with a large resonant diameter of 3 mm, corresponding to over 10,000 wavelengths in the material. The brightness, a figure of merit encapsulating both output power and beam quality, reaches 1 GW cm-2 sr-1, which rivals those of existing bulky lasers. Our work is an important milestone toward the advent of single-mode 1-kW-class semiconductor lasers, which are expected to replace conventional, bulkier lasers in the near future.

Details

Title
High-brightness scalable continuous-wave single-mode photonic-crystal laser
Author
Yoshida, Masahiro 1 ; Katsuno, Shumpei 1 ; Inoue, Takuya 2 ; Gelleta, John 1 ; Izumi, Koki 1 ; De Zoysa, Menaka; Ishizaki, Kenji; Noda, Susumu

 Department of Electronic Science and Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan 
 Photonics and Electronics Science and Engineering Center, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan 
Pages
727-732,732A-732B
Section
Article
Publication year
2023
Publication date
Jun 22, 2023
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
00280836
e-ISSN
14764687
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2829264790
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jun 22, 2023