RESUMO
Lasing is reported for ridge-waveguide devices processed from a 40-stage InP-based quantum cascade laser structure grown on a 6-inch silicon substrate with a metamorphic buffer. The structure used in the proof-of-concept experiment had a typical design, including an Al0.78In0.22As/In0.73Ga0.27As strain-balanced composition, with high strain both in quantum wells and barriers relative to InP, and an all-InP waveguide with a total thickness of 8 µm. Devices of size 3 mm x 40 µm, with a high-reflection back facet coating, emitted at 4.35 µm and had a threshold current of approximately 2.2 A at 78 K. Lasing was observed up to 170 K. Compared to earlier demonstrated InP-based quantum cascade lasers monolithically integrated onto GaAs, the same laser structure integrated on silicon had a lower yield and reliability. Surface morphology analysis suggests that both can be significantly improved by reducing strain for the active region layers relative to InP bulk waveguide layers surrounding the laser core.
RESUMO
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.116601.
RESUMO
Memory is one of the unique qualities of a glassy system. The relaxation of a glass to equilibrium contains information on the sample's excitation history, an effect often refer to as "aging." We demonstrate that under the right conditions a glass can also possess a different type of memory. We study the conductance relaxation of electron glasses that are fabricated at low temperatures. Remarkably, the dynamics are found to depend not only on the ambient measurement temperature but also on the maximum temperature to which the system was exposed. Hence the system "remembers" its highest temperature. This effect may be qualitatively understood in terms of energy barriers and local minima in configuration space and therefore may be a general property of the glass state.