Temperature Evolution of Two-State Lasing in Microdisk Lasers with InAs/InGaAs Quantum Dots

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Feb 26;13(5):877. doi: 10.3390/nano13050877.

Abstract

One-state and two-state lasing is investigated experimentally and through numerical simulation as a function of temperature in microdisk lasers with Stranski-Krastanow InAs/InGaAs/GaAs quantum dots. Near room temperature, the temperature-induced increment of the ground-state threshold current density is relatively weak and can be described by a characteristic temperature of about 150 K. At elevated temperatures, a faster (super-exponential) increase in the threshold current density is observed. Meanwhile, the current density corresponding to the onset of two-state lasing was found to decrease with increasing temperature, so that the interval of current density of pure one-state lasing becomes narrower with the temperature increase. Above a certain critical temperature, ground-state lasing completely disappears. This critical temperature drops from 107 to 37 °C as the microdisk diameter decreases from 28 to 20 μm. In microdisks with a diameter of 9 μm, a temperature-induced jump in the lasing wavelength from the first excited-state to second excited-state optical transition is observed. A model describing the system of rate equations and free carrier absorption dependent on the reservoir population provides a satisfactory agreement with experimental results. The temperature and threshold current corresponding to the quenching of ground-state lasing can be well approximated by linear functions of saturated gain and output loss.

Keywords: excited-state; ground-state; microdisks; quantum dots; temperature; two-state lasing; whispering gallery modes.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.