Wavelength-stabilized Bragg laser

Coherent light generators – Particular beam control device – Optical output stabilization

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C372S029011, C372S029016, C372S038020, C372S096000, C372S102000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06359915

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a laser and more particularly to a Bragg laser whose wavelength is stabilized.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The growing use of wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) optical networks for use in communications has created a need for lasers whose operating wavelength can be stabilized to a high degree. In particular, as the number of channels in such networks has increased and the difference in operating wavelength between channels has narrowed, it has become particularly important to stabilize the operating wavelength of each channel and accordingly, the wavelength of the laser serving as the transmission source for the channel. In addition, desired increases in functionality and cost control have created a need for lasers that can be programmed to operate sequentially at a number of the different wavelengths corresponding to different channels in the WDM network. The lasers satisfying this need will still need to be highly stabilized at a particular channel once it has been selected.
Presently, the transmission source for each channel typically comprises an individual fixed-wavelength laser stabilized against an optical reference to a wavelength desired for a particular channel. The individual laser used for each channel is typically a distributed feedback (DFB) laser. Such a laser generally includes a multilayer semiconductor chip of which one layer is of a composition to provide gain in the wavelength band of intended operation when suitably pumped. A second layer is typically included, adjacent and parallel to the gain layer, which contains a corrugated surface. This corrugation forms a grating to introduce distributed feedback thereby fixing the laser's specific operating wavelength at a value primarily determined by the periodicity of the grating. Specifically, the grating serves to preferentially select one longitudinal mode of the laser cavity for operation by reducing its optical loss to a value lower than any other longitudinal modes. Typically the operating wavelength of the preferentially selected longitudinal mode of the laser is further stabilized by control of the temperature at which the semiconductor chip is kept. This temperature control fixes the index of refraction of the laser materials and the chip length, and hence the characteristic wavelength of the corrugated grating. This temperature control of the laser is then used to fine-tune and lock the laser using an external optical reference in a servo loop to align the operating wavelength to the value prescribed for a particular channel in the WDM optical network.
Typically, for providing a control voltage for stabilization of the wavelength, a sample of the laser light is passed through an optical filter, external to the laser cavity, whose transmission and reflection characteristics show a significant wavelength dependence in the region where the wavelength channel is to be locked. Samples of the transmitted and reflected light are compared in amplitude, typically using photodetectors, and differences in these amplitudes are used to generate a voltage using a differential amplifier, for example. This voltage is used to change the temperature of the laser to control in turn the differences in amplitudes of the two samples to zero or some calibrated value, and hence to stabilize the laser at a desired wavelength. Such an arrangement is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,299,212, entitled, “Article Comprising a Wavelength-Stabilized Semiconductor Laser,” by Thomas L. Koch and Sheryl L. Woodward, issued Mar. 29, 1994.
Recent developments in WDM optical networking have made clear the potential of tunable transmitters. Such transmitters may be used to dynamically allocate a given data content to a particular wavelength channel for further routing in the network. Alternatively, tunable transmitters may be used for cost reduction by allowing a particular transmitter assembly to be available as a spare for failure protection, and such an assembly could protect against failure for a number of WDM transmitter channels. However, this provision of tunability brings further complexity to the stabilization discussed above.
One typical configuration for a tunable laser comprises a tunable optical filter within the laser cavity that preferentially selects out one longitudinal mode of the laser for operation in the system. This filter can be an intra-cavity narrow-band transmission filter, or a narrow-band reflector serving as an end mirror in the cavity. By tuning the optical filter, different longitudinal modes are sequentially selected for operation. A form of laser that offers this mode of operation is the tunable Distributed Bragg Reflector (DBR) laser. A DBR laser differs from a DFB laser in that the corrugated layer that controls the operating wavelength is contained in a section (referred to as the Bragg section) that is aligned longitudinally distinct from the section containing the gain medium (referred to as the gain section). This configuration provides a highly wavelength-selective mirror on one end of the laser cavity that will preferentially provide low losses to the longitudinal mode nearest to the peak reflectivity of the mirror. Furthermore, the Bragg section is usually comprised of layers whose index of refraction can be controlled independently from that of the gain section. This is typically done by constructing the Bragg section from materials that are nominally transparent at the operating wavelength, but change their index of refraction when electrical currents are injected into their constituent layers. As a consequence of these features, the wavelength-selective mirror provided by the Bragg section can be tuned in wavelength to sequentially select out different longitudinal modes for operation.
With these properties, a DBR laser allows for the selection of the operative longitudinal mode independently from the fine tuning discussed for wavelength stabilization of a DFB laser. However, temperature tuning of a DBR laser is possible just as in the DFB laser, generally adjusting the index of refraction and length of the Bragg section at the same rate as the index of refraction and length of the gain section. This results in the center wavelength of the Bragg section tracking the wavelength of the selected longitudinal mode as temperature is changed. As such, the selected longitudinal mode remains suitably aligned in wavelength near the peak reflectivity of the Bragg mirror when the temperature of the whole laser is altered, maintaining stable single longitudinal mode operation.
Using the independent control for longitudinal mode selection afforded by the Bragg section, the DBR laser then allows for both a coarse tuning through mode selection, by adjusting the index of the Bragg region with current injection for example, and fine tuning, by adjusting the temperature of the whole laser. In this respect the stabilization discussed in the context of the DFB laser can still be used with temperature control, for example, to stabilize the operating wavelength of the DBR against an external optical reference filter.
However, this stabilization scheme does not address the stabilization of the alignment of the Bragg section peak reflectivity wavelength with respect to the selected longitudinal mode chosen for operation in the system. In particular, it is known that aging effects in semiconductor optoelectronic structures such as lasers can alter the exact relationship between injection current and gain or index of refraction after substantial periods of operation. In this case, the initial injection current setting resulting in a particular alignment of the Bragg section mirror peak reflectivity over a selected longitudinal mode can drift, ultimately leading to a misalignment severe enough to change the identity of the selected longitudinal mode. That is, the drift can be large enough such that a new, previously discriminated against, longitudinal mode has higher reflectivity than the originally selected mode, and the laser will hop to this new mode with lower loss

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