Semiconductor  sources advance deeper into the ultraviolet
The cutting edge in  semiconductor light sources has moved into the ultraviolet. Developers are  pushing the wide-bandgap III-V gallium nitride compounds used in blue and  violet lasers to shorter wavelengths by adding aluminum to increase the  bandgap. In theory, that family can emit at wavelengths as short as 205 nm if  the active layer is aluminum nitride, and electroluminescence has been observed  at wavelengths shorter than 240 nm. However, practical gallium aluminum nitride  (GaAlN) devices now are limited to about 280 nm for LEDs and 370 nm for laser  diodes, says John Carrano, manager of the semiconductor UV optical sources  program at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA; Washington,  D.C.).

Shorter  wavelengths have been reported in laboratory devices. "But who cares who puts  out a nanowatt?" says Carrano. "I only consider it to be a real device when  it's milliwatt class and can last for at least hundreds of hours." Those powers  and lifetimes bring devices close to the levels DARPA wants for applications  such as biosensors, water purification, sterilization, and non-line-of-sight  atmospheric communications. Carrano thinks those requirements are achievable,  and that both LEDs and lasers can be pushed to somewhat shorter wavelengths.
UV semiconductor  materials
The raw material  for short-wavelength sources is GaxAl1-xN. Increasing the aluminum  concentration decreases the wavelength, because the bandgap increases from 3.4  to 6.2 eV when moving from pure GaN to pure AlN (see Fig. 1). However, as  bandgaps and aluminum concentrations increase, several problems arise in making  LEDs and lasers.
As the bandgap  increases, nonradiative mechanisms can dissipate more of the energy released by  recombining current carriers, leading to lower power conversion and  contributing to heat-management problems. The refractive-index difference that  confines light within quantum wells becomes smaller at higher aluminum levels,  increasing the light leakage. Nonradiative mechanisms also increase the  fraction of light emitted at long wavelengths, which can interfere with  fluorescence-based sensors.
Gallium nitride is  prone to internal defects that speed device degradation and failure. Although  developers have made steady progress, defects degrade electrical characteristics  and contribute to device failure. As aluminum concentration increases, it  becomes harder to make good electrical contacts, and p-type AlGaN becomes  increasingly resistive. As contact and bulk resistance increase, the voltage  drop across the diode increases, reducing power conversion efficiency and  increasing internal heating-contributing to shorter lifetimes.
Adding indium to  create the quaternary compound AlGaInN gives an additional degree of freedom,  so bandgap and lattice constant can be adjusted independently. Indium also  helps in the growth process, and causes some inhomo genieties that actually  increase radiative efficiency. Indium was important in developing blue diode  lasers, but it reduces bandgap energy, so its use is increasingly limited at shorter  wavelengths.
The allure of UV  LEDs
Light-emitting  diodes have important practical advantages over diode lasers. One is their  simplicity-they do not require elaborate internal microstructures to confine  light and form a laser resonator. Another is higher reliability, because their  lower drive currents lead to lower internal drive-current densities, and less  power dissipation and internal heat. Short-wavelength operation is inherently  limited by device degradation, so the slower degradation and greater  reliability of LEDs allows them to operate at much shorter wavelengths than  laser diodes.
Fortunately, the  key advantages of laser emission-narrow wavelength range and high  directionality-are not essential in most applications of semiconductor UV  sources. DARPA is stressing the need for powers in the milliwatt-range,  continuous-wave (CW) operation at room temperature, and reasonable lifetimes.  So far, milliwatt LEDs emitting near 280 nm have room-temperature lifetimes of  hundreds of hours. That wavelength is a critical target, because it marks the  edge of the "solar-blind" spectrum. Atmospheric absorption blocks solar UV  radiation at shorter wavelengths from reaching the ground, eliminating the  effects of background sunlight.
Carrano is more  concerned with improving LED efficiency than with pushing their wavelengths  much deeper into the UV. So far, the best power-conversion efficiency in the  280-nm range is 1% to 2%. That might be acceptable in the laboratory, but not  in field devices that require battery power or are hard to replace if they burn  out. So DARPA's target is 10% power-conversion efficiency. Higher efficiency  will also help extend operating lifetime of the LED itself, another major  concern for systems in the field. DARPA wants lifetimes of at least 10,000  hours so they can operate for an entire year without service.
One goal is a  family of inexpensive battery-powered biosensors that could be distributed in  the field to give early warning of possible biological agents. Some compounds  found in living cells fluoresce strongly when excited by UV light. Although  cheap LED-based biosensors would not be able to identify specific biological  agents, they could serve as an early warning system so troops could take  protective measures.

So far, milliwatt 280-nm LEDs  last for hundreds of hours. That improves at longer wavelengths, reaching  thousands of hours near 340 nm, but DARPA wants shorter wavelengths because  they promise new applications. Wavelengths shorter than 280 nm could be used  for short- distance covert communications that don't require a line of sight.  Strong Rayleigh scattering by the atmosphere would spread the signal over a  range of angles, while atmospheric absorption would limit transmission range  and block the solar background (see Fig 2).
"There really aren't any huge  challenges to get to 260 to 265 nm," Carrano says. Those wavelengths affect DNA  in living cells, forming bonds between the two strands that block their  replication, killing cells. DARPA envisions applications in UV sterilization of  water or surfaces, which now require bulky mercury-vapor lamps with peak  emission at 254 nm.
The UV-laser  problem
A UV laser diode  is "just a tougher device to make" than an LED, Carrano says. The more complex  heterostructure and high current density in laser diodes impose far more  stringent requirements on semiconductor materials than the lower currents and  simpler structure of LEDs.
The 400-nm violet  diodes available commercially are based on the ternary compound indium gallium  arsenide, but they can't be pushed beyond about 360 nm without adding aluminum,  which creates new problems that affect laser lifetime. Moving to shorter  wavelengths also increases problems with optical confinement, nonradiative  processes, and sustaining population inversions.
All these factors  limit CW room-temperature operation to much longer wavelengths than LEDs. For  milliwatt lasers, the cutting edge is 370 nm, where lifetimes are hundreds of  hours. At CLEO 2004 (San Francisco, CA), Cree (Durham, NC) reported diodes with  CW operation to 348 nm and pulsed operation to 343 nm, but powers and operating  lifetimes have been very low. DARPA wants lasers that operate for thousands of  hours at room temperature.
The Palo Alto  Research Center (PARC; Palo Alto, CA) is working to push diode lasers to 320 nm  and have demonstrated optically pumped laser hetero structures at wavelengths  to 308 nm. They are now working to improve the electrical properties. Noble  Johnson of PARC thinks his group is close to a 320‑nm current-driven diode  laser, but can't predict when they will reach laser threshold. "Right now, the  hurdle is to get the threshold voltages and currents down to reasonable values  and we are making steady progress," he adds.
The main interest  in semiconductor lasers is for high-end biosensors that could give more-precise  information than early-warning LED sensors. The lasers could be tuned to match  peak absorption wavelengths, with sensors monitoring wavelengths at which  specific agents fluoresce most strongly. These sensors would protect high-value  targets such as important buildings or military facilities. Definitive  identification of specific pathogens to diagnose people who may have been exposed  to bioagents might still require biological techniques that take several hours  and laboratory culture.
Outlook
Development of  semiconductor ultraviolet sources builds upon Shuji Nakamura's breakthrough  fabrication of blue and violet diode lasers in InGaN. Commercial developers  have found a sweet spot at 400 nm, which will be the base of an emerging  generation of optical-storage devices.
Pushing to shorter  wavelengths is an uphill battle, and at least in the near term LEDs will be  more practical than lasers. But most applications don't require lasers, and  real progress is being made in areas from fundamental materials issues to  device structure. Semiconductor sources are marching deeper into the  ultraviolet. 
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