Advanced Photonics, Volume. 1, Issue 1, 014002(2019)
Semiconductor nanolasers and the size-energy-efficiency challenge: a review
Fig. 1. Comparison of (a) first electrical computer with (b) today’s supercomputer. The similarity in volume and power consumption as well as the dramatic size reduction and improvement in computation power of the electrical computers over the last 70 years naturally raise an interesting question: would we ever be able to achieve similar volume reduction of today’s supercomputers through miniaturization and integration?
Fig. 2. (a) Schematic of a laser-based optical interconnect in a present-day supercomputer based on VCSELs and optical fiber and (b) future on-chip interconnect based on a nanolaser array and a waveguide array.
Fig. 3. Relationship between energy efficiency (EDR, in fJ/bit) and modulation bandwidth for various values of diameter for a cylindrical laser (adapted from Ref. 22).
Fig. 4. Device volume normalized by the wavelength cubed for several types of semiconductor lasers: EEL, edge emitting lasers; MD, microdisk; P-laser, plasmonic lasers. Symbols represent typical values for these lasers; colored bars indicate the ranges of values found in the literature. Red marks along the
Fig. 5. Comparison of a dielectric cavity and a metallic cavity. (a) The dependence of the cavity
Fig. 6. Contributions of the photonic and electronic densities of states to the size reduction and energy efficiency of semiconductor nanolasers.
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Cun-Zheng Ning, "Semiconductor nanolasers and the size-energy-efficiency challenge: a review," Adv. Photon. 1, 014002 (2019)
Category: Reviews
Received: Oct. 3, 2018
Accepted: Dec. 29, 2018
Published Online: Feb. 18, 2019
The Author Email: Ning Cun-Zheng (cning@tsinghua.edu.cn)