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Surface emitting semiconductor laser chip and method for producing the chip Number:7,521,723 from the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) owispatent

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Title: Surface emitting semiconductor laser chip and method for producing the chip

Abstract: A surface emitting semiconductor laser chip contains a semiconductor body, which has, at least partly, a crystal structure with principal crystal directions, a radiation exit face, and side faces laterally delimiting the semiconductor body. At least one of the side faces is disposed obliquely with respect to the principal crystal directions.

Patent Number: 7,521,723 Issued on 04/21/2009 to Plass,   et al.


Inventors: Plass; Werner (Regensburg, DE), Jung; Christian (Sinzing, DE), Albrecht; Tony (Bad Abbach, DE), Streller; Udo (Regenstauf, DE)
Assignee: Osram Opto Semiconductors GmbH (Regensburg, DE)
Appl. No.: 10/631,384
Filed: July 31, 2003


Foreign Application Priority Data

Jul 31, 2002 [DE] 102 34 976

Current U.S. Class: 257/95 ; 257/98; 257/E21.121; 257/E21.127; 257/E21.131; 438/29
Current International Class: H01L 21/00 (20060101)
Field of Search: 257/95,200,98 438/29


References Cited [Referenced By]

U.S. Patent Documents
3901738 August 1975 Hunsperger et al.
4990465 February 1991 Liau et al.
6154479 November 2000 Yoshikawa et al.
6483860 November 2002 Ueki et al.
6584136 June 2003 Ju et al.
2002/0109148 August 2002 Shveykin
2003/0007531 January 2003 Aggerstam
2003/0152125 August 2003 Kinoshita
2004/0048429 March 2004 Baur et al.
2004/0217381 November 2004 Wang et al.
2005/0003565 January 2005 Eisert et al.
2007/0105349 May 2007 Hallin et al.
Foreign Patent Documents
100 38 235 Feb., 2002 DE
8-116125 May., 1996 JP
2001-244564 Sep., 2001 JP
WO 02/37578 May., 2002 WO

Other References

G Winsetel: "Optoelektronik I", Springer Verlag, Germany, 1980, pp. 300-309. cited by other .
Neil W. Ashcroft et al., Cornell University, "Solid State Physics", Saunders College Publishing, Harcourt Brace College Publishers (1976), Chapters 4-5, pp. 63-94. cited by other.

Primary Examiner: Sefer; A.
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Cohen Pontani Lieberman & Pavane LLP

Claims



We claim:

1. A surface emitting semiconductor laser chip, comprising: a semiconductor body having a radiation exit face, a crystal structure having principal crystal directions extending along a lateral direction of the radiation exit face, and side faces laterally delimiting said semiconductor body, at least one of said side faces disposed obliquely with respect to said principal crystal directions and perpendicularly with respect to said radiation exit face.

2. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 1, wherein said semiconductor body has a cross section selected from the group of square cross sections and rectangular cross sections disposed parallel to said radiation exit face.

3. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 1, wherein at least one of said principal crystal directions extends parallel to said radiation exit face, and at least one of said side faces forms an angle of between 40.degree. and 50.degree. with said at least one principal crystal direction.

4. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 1, wherein said angle is 45 .degree..

5. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 3, wherein said at least one principal crystal direction is a [100] direction.

6. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 1, wherein the semiconductor body contains a substrate having, at least partly, a crystal structure.

7. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 6, wherein said semiconductor body contains as III-V compound semiconductor.

8. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 7, wherein said III-V compound semiconductor is selected from the group consisting of GaAs, AlGaAs, and a nitride compound semiconductor.

9. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 1, wherein the semiconductor laser chip is a VCSEL.

10. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 1, wherein the radiation exit face is a polygon having an even number of sides, wherein the side faces are disposed obliquely with respect to the principal crystal direction and perpendicularly with respect to said radiation exit face.

11. The semiconductor laser chip according to claim 10, wherein the polygon is a rectangle.
Description



BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Field of the Invention

The invention relates to a surface emitting semiconductor laser chip having a semiconductor body. The semiconductor body has, at least partly, a crystal structure with principal crystal directions, a radiation exit face, and side faces laterally delimiting the semiconductor body. The semiconductor body is then divided into a plurality of semiconductor laser chips along separating lines.

Surface emitting semiconductor lasers are disclosed in Published, Non-Prosecuted German Patent Application DE 100 38 235 A1, for example. What is characteristic of such lasers is an emission direction disposed perpendicular to the chip surface. The semiconductor lasers are often also referred to as vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL). They differ in this in particular from so-called edge emitting lasers, in which the emission is effected through a side face of the laser chip.

In this case the designations "surface" and "side face" are associated with the fabrication of such chips in the wafer composite, the "surface" corresponding to the wafer surface. The side faces, by contrast, are only produced when the wafer is divided into individual semiconductor chips.

In a customary method for producing edge emitting laser chips, a wafer is usually broken in order to be divided into individual semiconductor chips, the breaking line running along a principal crystal direction of the wafer. This gives rise to side faces of the semiconductor bodies in the form of smooth cleavage faces that are simultaneously mirror facets of the respective laser resonators.

In the case of surface emitting lasers, the formation of such cleavage faces as side faces is not necessary on account of the different, perpendicular orientation of the resonator or emission direction. In order to produce such laser chips, therefore, the corresponding wafers can also be divided by sawing or etching instead of by breaking.

It has been ascertained in the case of light-emitting diode chips that a frequent ageing mechanism is based on dislocation lines arising in the semiconductor crystal. The dislocation lines can propagate during operation and form nonradiative recombination centers. Such crystal defects lower the efficiency of the device and may finally lead to failure. In the luminescent image of a semiconductor crystal, such crystal defects are seen as dark lines, and so they are also referred to as dark line defects (DLDs).

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a surface emitting semiconductor laser chip and method for producing the chip that overcome the above-mentioned disadvantages of the prior art devices and methods of this general type, which has an improved ageing behavior or an increased lifetime. In particular, the intention is to reduce the production of nonradiative recombination centers or DLDs. Furthermore, it is an object of the invention to specify a corresponding production method.

The invention provides for the formation of a surface emitting semiconductor laser chip having a semiconductor body, which has, at least partly, a crystal structure with assigned principal crystal directions, a radiation exit face and side faces laterally delimiting the semiconductor body. At least one side face is disposed obliquely, i.e. neither parallel nor perpendicular, with respect to the principal crystal directions. The radiation emission is effected during operation essentially perpendicular to the radiation exit face extending in the lateral direction.

Disposing the side faces obliquely with respect to the principal crystal directions has the advantage that fewer seeds for dislocation lines arise in the crystal structure and the number of dislocation lines thus decreases. This slows down the ageing of the semiconductor chip.

The semiconductor body preferably has a rectangular or square cross section parallel to the radiation exit face. This form can easily be fabricated from a wafer by sawing a wafer along sawing lines that cross one another orthogonally, it advantageously being possible for all the side faces to be disposed obliquely with respect to the principal crystal directions. In the invention, further preference is attached to at least one of the side faces being formed perpendicular to the radiation exit face.

The invention is suitable in particular for semiconductor materials having a cubic crystal structure, in which case, by way of example, without restricting the generality, the crystal directions [100] and [010] lie parallel to the radiation exit face and to the wafer surface, respectively. In this case, it is advantageous to dispose the side faces such that they form an angle of between 40.degree. and 50.degree., preferably 45.degree., with the principal crystal directions [100] and [010].

In an advantageous refinement of the invention, the semiconductor body has a substrate in the form of a semiconductor crystal, which defines the crystal directions, for example [100] and [010]. In this case, the laser structure is applied as a semiconductor layer sequence on the substrate. Such a layer sequence may be grown by an epitaxy method, for example.

The semiconductor body is preferably based on the GaAs/AlGaAs material system. In addition to the GaAs and AlGaAs, the semiconductor body may, of course, also contain other compounds such as, for example, AlGaInAs or InGaAs. Other III-V semiconductors or nitride compound semiconductors, for example the compounds GaP, InGaP, InAsP, GaAlP, InGaAlP, GaAsP, InGaAsP and InGaNAs are also suitable in the invention.

A production method according to the invention provides first for a wafer with a plurality of surface emitting semiconductor laser structures to be produced by a conventional fabrication method, the wafer having a crystal structure with principal crystal directions. The wafer is subsequently divided into a plurality of semiconductor laser chips along predetermined separating lines. The separating lines are disposed such that they run obliquely, that is to say neither parallel nor perpendicular, with respect to the principal crystal directions. The wafer is preferably sawn or divided by an etching method.

Disposing the separating lines obliquely with respect to the principal crystal directions advantageously reduces the formation of seeds for dislocation lines and, consequently, the production of ageing-accelerating dislocation lines or DLDs.

Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.

Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a surface emitting semiconductor laser chip and method for producing the chip, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.

The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic perspective view of a first exemplary embodiment of a surface emitting semiconductor laser chip according to the invention;

FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic sectional view, taken along the line II-II shown in FIG. 1, of the first exemplary embodiment; and

FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic plan view of a second exemplary embodiment of a surface emitting semiconductor laser chip according to the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

In all the figures of the drawing, sub-features and integral parts that correspond to one another bear the same reference symbol in each case. Referring now to the figures of the drawing in detail and first, particularly, to FIG. 1 thereof, there is shown diagrammatically a semiconductor laser chip of a VCSEL. The chip contains a substrate 2, to which a stack of semiconductors layers 3 is applied. The semiconductor layers 3 form a radiation-generating laser structure of the component in this case. The structure is explained in more detail below in connection with FIG. 2.

The semiconductor body 1 containing the semiconductor layers 3 has a radiation exit face 4 and is laterally delimited by a plurality of side faces 5. During operation, laser radiation 6 is emitted essentially in a direction perpendicular to the radiation exit face 4.

The substrate 2 and the semiconductor layers 3 applied thereto have, at least partly, a crystal structure. The crystal lattice in a lateral direction is illustrated by the broken lines 16 and the associated principal crystal directions 7 are illustrated by arrows.

In the case of layers grown epitaxially, the structure is generally prescribed by the substrate. The principal crystal directions 7 of the semiconductor layers are thus also defined in a lateral direction. What is essential to the invention is that the side faces 5 are disposed such that they run obliquely with respect to the principal crystal directions 7, that is to say neither parallel nor perpendicular to the directions.

It has been ascertained in the context of the fabrication of LEDs that such a configuration of the side faces 5 with respect to the principal crystal directions 7, in contrast to a parallel or perpendicular configuration, advantageously reduces the formation of seeds for dislocation lines and an accompanying accelerated ageing of the component. Although the radiation-emitting region is significantly further away from the sawing track in the case of surface emitting semiconductor laser chips than in the case of LEDs, it has been found in the case of the invention that in this, too, the ageing of the component can advantageously be reduced by the configuration of the side faces with respect to the principal crystal directions.

FIG. 2 represents a sectional view taken along the line II-II through the exemplary embodiment shown in FIG. 1. The semiconductor layers 3 are disposed on the substrate 2, for example a GaAs substrate 2. The layer stack 3 contains mirror layers 8, 11, which form the laser resonator and may be embodied as Bragg mirrors, for example. Such Bragg mirrors may be realized for example in each case as a layer sequence with alternate layers made of Al.sub.0.2Ga.sub.0.8As and Al.sub.0.9Ga.sub.0.1As.

An active layer 9 is disposed between the mirror layers 8, 11. The active layer 9 is preferably configured as a quantum well structure, for example in the form of a single quantum well (SQW) structure or a multiple quantum well (MQW) structure. An example of a suitable MQW structure is a structure having three GaAs quantum wells with an emission wavelength of about 850 nm.

A layer 10 is formed as a so-called current constriction layer which, during operation, guides the pumping current, represented by way of example using current paths 15, toward the center of the active layer 9 and thus increases the pumping density of the laser. The current constriction layer may be formed as an AlAs layer; it is partly laterally oxidized.

In this case, an active radiation-emitting zone 14 arises in the center of the active layer 9, in which case, when the pumping threshold or the threshold current is exceeded, the laser starts to oscillate and emits laser radiation 6 in a direction perpendicular to the radiation exit face 4. For supplying the pumping current, contact metallizations 12, 13 are provided on the radiation exit face 4 and the opposite surface of the substrate 2. The contact metallization 12 is embodied as a ring contact, for example. The contact metallization 12 is preferably embodied as a p-contact, for example as a TiPtAu contact, and the contact metallization 13 as an n-contact, for example as an AuGe contact.

For the sake of clarity, the contact metallizations 12, 13 are not represented in FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 shows a diagrammatic plan view of a second exemplary embodiment of the invention. The semiconductor body 1 essentially corresponds to the exemplary embodiment represented in FIG. 1. A GaAs-based material is used as the semiconductor material. Without restricting the generality, the principal crystal directions [100] and [010] are disposed parallel to the radiation exit face 4. The semiconductor body 1 has a square cross section parallel to the radiation exit face 4, as shown by the plan view, and is laterally delimited by side faces 5. The side faces 5 in each case form an angle of 45.degree. with the principal crystal directions [100] and [010].

It has been found that the ageing behavior of a corresponding component, such as a VCSEL, for example, can be significantly improved by a configuration of this type.

*


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