Semiconductor lasers,an important subfield of semiconductor photonics,have fundamentally changed many aspects of our lives and enabled many technologies since their creation in the 1960s.As in other semiconductor-base...Semiconductor lasers,an important subfield of semiconductor photonics,have fundamentally changed many aspects of our lives and enabled many technologies since their creation in the 1960s.As in other semiconductor-based fields,such as microelectronics,miniaturization has been a constant theme,with nanolasers being an important frontier of research over the last decade.We review the progress,existing issues,and future prospects of nanolasers,especially in relation to their potential application in chip-scale optical interconnects.One of the important challenges in this application is minimizing the size and energy consumption of nanolasers.We begin with the application background of this challenge and then compare basic features of various semiconductor lasers.We present existing issues with nanolasers and discuss potential solutions to meet the size and energy-efficiency challenge.Our discussions cover a broad range of miniaturized lasers,including plasmonic nanolasers and lasers with two-dimensional monolayer gain materials,with focus on near-infrared wavelengths.展开更多
基金The author acknowledges funding support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Key Research Program“New Physics and Control of Light Field”(No.91750206)from Tsinghua University,from the Beijing National Research Center for Information Technology,the Beijing Innovation Center of Future Chips.
文摘Semiconductor lasers,an important subfield of semiconductor photonics,have fundamentally changed many aspects of our lives and enabled many technologies since their creation in the 1960s.As in other semiconductor-based fields,such as microelectronics,miniaturization has been a constant theme,with nanolasers being an important frontier of research over the last decade.We review the progress,existing issues,and future prospects of nanolasers,especially in relation to their potential application in chip-scale optical interconnects.One of the important challenges in this application is minimizing the size and energy consumption of nanolasers.We begin with the application background of this challenge and then compare basic features of various semiconductor lasers.We present existing issues with nanolasers and discuss potential solutions to meet the size and energy-efficiency challenge.Our discussions cover a broad range of miniaturized lasers,including plasmonic nanolasers and lasers with two-dimensional monolayer gain materials,with focus on near-infrared wavelengths.