Laser Diode Provides High-Power Pulses
Researchers have constructed a laser diode capable of generating approximately 100-W, picosecond-range pulses by using an AlGaAs layer as a potential barrier between the structure's PN junction and gain region. The barrier slows down the accumulation of charge carriers in the gain region, prohibiting it from reaching its threshold limit before a high pumping current of 10
5 A/cm
2 -- and a resulting 10
3-V/cm electric field -- is achieved.
The team, from the
University of Oulu in Finland and
Inject enterprise in Saratov, Russia, reported in the June 17 issue of
Applied Physics Letters that such lasers may someday provide a compact alternative for applications such as laser tomography and time-imaging spectroscopy, which now require solid or dye microcavity lasers.
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