The Research Center for Silicon Nano-Science (SNS) of the Advanced Research
Laboratories (ARL) at Tokyo City University developed a silicon-based LED. It is
made by embedding Ge microparticles (quantum dots) with a diameter of several
tens of nanometers to 100nm in the i-layer of a Si-based device with a pin
structure.
The university claims that the light emitting device will help realize a
silicon (Si) photonics because it can be produced by using a manufacturing
process compatible with a CMOS process and possibly is capable of laser
oscillation.
The Ge microparticles enhance the recombination rate of electrons and holes,
said Takuya Maruizumi, director of the SNS and professor of the faculty of
Engineering at the university.
"The quantum dots are made by using the MBE (molecular beam epitaxy) method
at a temperature of about 400°C," Maruizumi said. "That's why the manufacturing
process for the device is compatible with a CMOS process."
The diameter of the device's active layer is about 3μm. The university has
already confirmed that the device emits light with a wavelength of about 1.2μm
by current injection at room temperature (300K). The internal quantum efficiency
of the light emission is 10-2.
"In addition to the high quantum efficiency, the device is both thermally and
chemically stable," Maruizumi said. "So, it is superior to existing
silicon-based light emitting devices."
"If a resonator structure is formed by using a photonic crystal, it will be
capable of laser oscillation," Maruizumi said. "We will change the emission
wavelength to the 1.5μm band, which can be used for communications. And, in two
or three years, we would like to develop a device that works as an optical
switch and commercialize it.
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