We report broad bandwidth blue superluminescent light-emitting diodes (SLEDs) based on a short-cavity active region. The dependencies of amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) output power and gain bandwidth on cavity length were investigated in devices whose gain medium consists of a ridge waveguide with embedded InGaN/GaN quantum wells sandwiched between one etched facet coated with a high reflectivity distributed Bragg mirror and one cleaved facet with an anti-reflection coating. 250 mu m-long blue SLEDs exhibit a spectral bandwidth up to 7.5 nm at 1.72 mW output power at a wavelength of 427 nm. As cavity length decreases, the bandwidth gradually broadens up to 15 nm for the shortest, 40 mu m-long, SLED devices. ASE is confirmed by current-dependent electroluminescence spectra and polarization-dependent emission intensity measurements. The optical features of those short-cavity devices could be helpful for designing broad bandwidth SLEDs aiming for various applications such as optical coherence tomography, next generation displays, on-chip biosensing and imaging. (C) The Author(s) 2019. Published by ECS.
Philip Johannes Walter Moll, Chunyu Guo, Hao Yang
Kirsten Emilie Moselund, Chang Won Lee
Camille Sophie Brès, Moritz Bartnick, Gayathri Bharathan