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Thesis
Home   /   Thesis   /   Design, fabrication, and characterization of GeSn alloy-based laser sources for mid-infrared silicon photonics

Design, fabrication, and characterization of GeSn alloy-based laser sources for mid-infrared silicon photonics

Engineering sciences Optics - Laser optics - Applied optics Photonics, Imaging and displays Technological challenges

Abstract

You will design and fabricate laser and LED sources based on GeSn alloy in a cleanroom environment. These novel group-IV direct-bandgap materials, epitaxially grown on 200 mm Si wafers, are considered CMOS-compatible and hold great promise for the development of low-cost mid-infrared light sources. You will characterize these light sources using a mid-infrared optical test bench, with the goal of their future integration into a Germanium/Silicon photonic platform. Additionally, you will assess the feasibility of gas detection within a concentration range from a few dozen to several thousand ppm.
The objectives of the PhD are to:
• Design efficient GeSn (Si) stack structures that confine both electrons and holes while providing strong optical gain.
• Evaluate the optical gain under optical pumping and electrical injection at different strain levels and doping concentrations.
• Design and fabricate laser cavities with strong optical confinement.
• Characterize the fabricated devices under optical and electrical injection as a function of their strain state at both room and low temperatures.
• Achieve electrically pumped continuous-wave group-IV lasers.
• Understand the physical phenomena that may impact the material and device performance for light emission.
• Characterize the best-fabricated devices for low-cost environmental gas detection applications.
This work will involve collaborations with international laboratories working on the same dynamic research topic.

Laboratory

Département d’Optronique (LETI)
Service des Nouvelles Applications de la Photonique
Laboratoire des Capteurs Optiques
Université Grenoble Alpes
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