Room Temperature Laser Action in Laterally Overgrown GaN Pyramids on (111) Silicon


S. Bidnyk, B.D. Little, Y.H. Cho, J. Krasinski, J.J. Song
Oklahoma State University

W. Yang, S.A. McPherson
Honeywell Technology Center

This article was presented as part of Symposium G, "Gallium Nitride and Related Alloys" at the 1998 Fall Meeting of the Materials Research Society held in Boston, Massachusetts, November 30-December 4.

Abstract

Single and multi-mode room temperature laser action was observed in GaN pyramids under strong optical pumping. The 5- and 15-micron-wide hexagonal-based pyramids were laterally overgrown on a patterned GaN/AlN seeding layer grown on a (111) silicon substrate by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition. The pyramids were individually pumped, imaged, and spectrally analyzed through a high magnification optical system using a high density pulsed excitation source. We suggest that the cavity formed in a pyramid is of a ring type, formed by total internal reflections of light off the pyramids' surfaces. The mode spacing of the laser emission was found to be correlated to the size of pyramids. The effects of pyramid geometry and pulse excitation on the nature of laser oscillations inside of the pyramids is discussed. Practical applications of the results for the development of light-emitting pixels and laser arrays are suggested.

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Cite this article as: MRS Internet J. Nitride Semicond. Res. 4S1, G6.48 (1999).


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MRS Internet Journal of Nitride Semiconductor Research
last updated Saturday, April 3, 1999 2:44:04 AM.
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