Abstract

Semiconductor broadband light emitters have emerged as ideal and vital light sources for a range of biomedical sensing/imaging applications, especially for optical coherence tomography systems. Although near-infrared broadband light emitters have found increasingly wide utilization in these imaging applications, the requirement to simultaneously achieve both a high spectral bandwidth and output power is still challenging for such devices. Owing to the relatively weak amplified spontaneous emission, as a consequence of the very short non-radiative carrier lifetime of the inter-subband transitions in quantum cascade structures, it is even more challenging to obtain desirable mid-infrared broadband light emitters. There have been great efforts in the past 20 years to pursue high-efficiency broadband optical gain and very low reflectivity in waveguide structures, which are two key factors determining the performance of broadband light emitters. Here we describe the realization of a high continuous wave light power of >20 mW and broadband width of >130 nm with near-infrared broadband light emitters and the first mid-infrared broadband light emitters operating under continuous wave mode at room temperature by employing a modulation p-doped InGaAs/GaAs quantum dot active region with a ‘J’-shape ridge waveguide structure and a quantum cascade active region with a dual-end analogous monolithic integrated tapered waveguide structure, respectively. This work is of great importance to improve the performance of existing near-infrared optical coherence tomography systems and describes a major advance toward reliable and cost-effective mid-infrared imaging and sensing systems, which do not presently exist due to the lack of appropriate low-coherence mid-infrared semiconductor broadband light sources.

Highlights

  • Semiconductor broadband light emitters (BLEs) are edge-emitting light sources that utilize the internal amplification of spontaneous emission (ASE)

  • BLEs have emerged as the ideal core optical sources for numerous industrial and medical applications, such as fiber-optic gyroscopes and sensors, wavelengthdivision multiplexing system testing, and especially optical coherence tomography (OCT) systems1–4

  • Such broadband light sources operating in the nearinfrared (NIR) region have been successfully employed in OCT for clinical ophthalmology and skin disease diagnosis5,6

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Summary

Introduction

Semiconductor broadband light emitters (BLEs) are edge-emitting light sources that utilize the internal amplification of spontaneous emission (ASE). BLEs have emerged as the ideal core optical sources for numerous industrial and medical applications, such as fiber-optic gyroscopes and sensors, wavelengthdivision multiplexing system testing, and especially optical coherence tomography (OCT) systems. BLEs have emerged as the ideal core optical sources for numerous industrial and medical applications, such as fiber-optic gyroscopes and sensors, wavelengthdivision multiplexing system testing, and especially optical coherence tomography (OCT) systems1–4 Such broadband light sources operating in the nearinfrared (NIR) region have been successfully employed in OCT for clinical ophthalmology and skin disease diagnosis. It is very challenging to broaden the emission bandwidth (full width at half maximum (FWHM)) beyond ~ 100 nm while keeping a high continuous wave (CW) power output of 410 mW7,8. The main challenge for the development of NIR-OCT imaging techniques is to simultaneously widen the bandwidth and increase the light power of the light sources and enhance the axial resolution of the images and the penetration depth in tissues

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