Optoelectronics
Renesas Electronics to Enter into the Blue-Violet Laser Market with a Newly Developed Structure Formation
Renesas Electronics announced the company’s first blue-violet semiconductor laser diode with a wavelength of 405 nm and a new structure incorporating an optical waveguide into the semiconductor device, which enables high power output and excellent suitability for mass production.
The The Blu-ray disc drive market has been expanding rapidly as Blu-ray recorders achieved widespread adoption and increasing numbers of Blu-ray disc drives being incorporated in flat-screen TVs and PCs. The market is expected to grow continuously, with sales of 100 million units in fiscal 2011, growing by 150 percent from the previous year. Of these, the number of recorders, which require high output lasers, is expected to amount to 30 million units.
Majority of the existing blue-violet semiconductor laser diodes adopts a ridge-waveguide structure in which dry etching process is used on the semiconductor surface to fabricate an optical waveguide, a path that guides laser light, and current confinement to the light emitting layer, in a ridge formation. In a laser device, the thickness of the cladding layer formed immediately above the light-emission layer directly determines the device performance. However, the conventional dry etching process makes it difficult to control the cladding layer thickness due to lack of suitable material for etching stopper, which sometimes resulted in inconsistent laser performance.
Renesas Electronics’ new NV4A61F laser diode adopts the company’s newly developed inner-stripe structure, which reduces performance inconsistency while providing robust high-power output and low noise. The epitaxial growth technology that is capable of controlling the layer thickness at 1-nm level, same as that of an atomic layer, improves accuracy of the fabrication of the cladding layer by ten times compared to the conventional dry etching process. In addition, to efficiently concentrate current in the light emitting layer, the new laser adopts aluminum nitride (AlN) as the material to form the current blocking layer directly above the cladding layer. With its excellent thermal conductance and transparency necessary for the laser light to pass through, this new material improves heat dissipation from the light emitting layer by approximately 20% compared to the conventional ridge waveguide laser and realizes advanced device performance including excellent linearity in current and optical power output up to the high-temperature, high-output range.
Renesas Electronics aims to expand its lineup of blue-violet laser diode, expect to release the next 420 mW laser for dual-layer, 12× Blu-ray recording by December, 2010 to support the realization of a next-generation of high-speed Blu-ray recorders.