Impact of Device Topology on the Performance of High-Speed 1550 nm Wafer-Fused VCSELs

PHOTONICS(2023)

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Abstract
A detailed experimental analysis of the impact of device topology on the performance of 1550 nm VCSELs with an active region based on thin InGaAs/InAlGaAs quantum wells and a composite InAlGaAs buried tunnel junction is presented. The high-speed performance of the lasers with L-type device topology (with the largest double-mesa sizes) is mainly limited by electrical parasitics showing noticeable damping of the relaxation oscillations. For the S-type device topology (with the smallest double-mesa sizes), the decrease in the parasitic capacitance of the reverse-biased p(+)n-junction region outside the buried tunnel junction region allowed to raise the parasitic cutoff frequency up to 13-14 GHz. The key mechanism limiting the high-speed performance of such devices is thus the damping of the relaxation oscillations. VCSELs with S-type device topology demonstrate more than 13 GHz modulation bandwidth and up to 37 Gbps nonreturn-to-zero data transmission under back-to-back conditions at 20 & DEG;C.
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Key words
vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs), wafer fusion, optical modulation, long wavelength, short cavity, 1550 nm, MBE
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