Prof. Tansu is awarded U.S. patent for new method of emitting lasers
Nelson Tansu, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, has been awarded a U.S. patent for a new method of achieving 1550-nanometer lasers on gallium-arsenide.
The technique was developed by Tansu and Luke J. Mawst, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Wisconsin.
The technique utilizes Type-II gallium-arsenide antimony/gallium-arsenide nitride quantum well (Type-II GaAsSb-GaAsN QW) optoelectronics to achieve 1550-nm lasers on gallium-arsenide and has potential uses in optical telecommunications.
Typically, lasers emitting at the 1550-nm wavelength regime are based on indium-phosphide technology, which requires more complex methods to fabricate VCSELs (vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers) and also requires expensive methods to ensure thermal stability.
By using the new patented technology, says Tansu, scientists can not only realize 1550-nm lasers on GaAs, but may even be able to extend the applications to 2500-nm for GaAs-based optoelectronics.
Tansu and Mawst have a patent pending on type-II QW optoelectronics to achieve 3-4 micron emission wavelengths that might find application in free-space communications, biochemical sensors, and infrared countermeasures against heat-seeking missiles that threaten both military and commercial aircrafts.
The technique was developed by Tansu and Luke J. Mawst, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Wisconsin.
The technique utilizes Type-II gallium-arsenide antimony/gallium-arsenide nitride quantum well (Type-II GaAsSb-GaAsN QW) optoelectronics to achieve 1550-nm lasers on gallium-arsenide and has potential uses in optical telecommunications.
Typically, lasers emitting at the 1550-nm wavelength regime are based on indium-phosphide technology, which requires more complex methods to fabricate VCSELs (vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers) and also requires expensive methods to ensure thermal stability.
By using the new patented technology, says Tansu, scientists can not only realize 1550-nm lasers on GaAs, but may even be able to extend the applications to 2500-nm for GaAs-based optoelectronics.
Tansu and Mawst have a patent pending on type-II QW optoelectronics to achieve 3-4 micron emission wavelengths that might find application in free-space communications, biochemical sensors, and infrared countermeasures against heat-seeking missiles that threaten both military and commercial aircrafts.
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Tuesday, November 30, 2004