The 795 nm wavelength corresponds to the D1 transition of rubidium atoms and is widely used in atomic optical pumping, atomic clocks, magnetometers, and precision spectroscopy. For compact free-space collimation, beam shaping, and efficient fiber coupling, edge-emitting semiconductor lasers with reduced fast-axis (vertical) divergence are highly desirable, yet low-divergence designs at 795 nm remain limited. Here, we propose and demonstrate low-divergence photonic-crystal epitaxy (LD–PC) for 795 nm edge-emitting lasers. By engineering a periodic n-side photonic-crystal stack to place the fundamental vertical mode near the photonic band edge, the vertical mode is expanded while maintaining effective modal discrimination. Narrow-ridge Fabry–Pérot lasers based on GaAsP/AlGaAs single-quantum-well epitaxy were fabricated and characterized. The optimized LD–PC device (3 μm ridge width, 1 mm cavity length) delivers 227 mW at 200 mA with a threshold current of 23 mA, a slope efficiency of 1.28 W/A, and a peak wall-plug efficiency of 55% under continuous-wave operation at 25 °C. The measured far-field divergences (FWHMs) are 7.16° and 18.83° in the lateral and vertical directions, respectively, corresponding to a reduction in the vertical divergence from >40° in the reference structure to <20° with LD–PC. These results validate photonic-crystal epitaxy as an effective route toward compact, high-performance, low-divergence 795 nm semiconductor laser sources for rubidium-based atomic systems.
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Bob L. Hou
Yufei Wang
Aiyi Qi
Photonics
Chinese Academy of Sciences
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Institute of Semiconductors
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Hou et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8958f6c1944d70ce06966 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13040357