Morris P. Kesler, Christoph Harder
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters
Summary form only given. Until a few years ago, it was generally believed that GaAs/AlGaAs-based lasers were inherently unreliable. It has since been established by our Group that these lasers suffered from facet corrosion and, as a consequence, catastrophic optical mirror damage and that this can be eliminated by appropriate measures during chip processing. Our first-generation, high-power GaAs/AlGaAs 980-nm lasers have now been undergoing life testing for close to 45,000 h at power levels of between 150 and 200 mW and temperatures between 20 and 75/spl deg/C. None of these lasers has failed yet, nor have more recent devices with chemical-vapor-deposited (CVD) mirror reflectivity modification layers. These results now clearly support our early finding that GaAs/AlGaAs-based high-power 980 nm lasers are extremely reliable and meet today's requirements for EDFAs for terrestrial applications.
Morris P. Kesler, Christoph Harder
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters
Yves B. Gigase, Christoph S. Harder, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
Morris P. Kesler, Christoph Harder
Applied Physics Letters
Frank Tong, Chung-Sheng Li, et al.
OFC 1996