Robin K. Huang
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Robin K. Huang.
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices | 2006
Michael W. Dashiell; John F. Beausang; Hassan Ehsani; Gus Nichols; David M. DePoy; Lee R. Danielson; Phil Talamo; Kevin D. Rahner; Edward J. Brown; Steven R. Burger; Patrick M. Fourspring; William F. Topper; Paul F. Baldasaro; C. A. Wang; Robin K. Huang; Michael K. Connors; George W. Turner; Zane A. Shellenbarger; Gordon C. Taylor; Jizhong Li; Ramon U. Martinelli; Dmitry Donetski; Sergei Anikeev; G. Belenky; Serge Luryi
InxGa1-xAsySb1-y thermophotovoltaic (TPV) diodes were grown lattice matched to GaSb substrates by metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy in the bandgap range of EG = 0.5 to 0.6 eV. InGaAsSb TPV diodes, utilizing front-surface spectral control filters, are measured with thermal-to-electric conversion efficiency and power density (PD) of nTPV = 19.7% and PD = 0.58 W/cm2, respectively, for a radiator temperature of Tradiator = 950 degC, diode temperature of Tdiode = 27 degC, and diode bandgap of EG = 0.53 eV. Practical limits to TPV energy conversion efficiency are established using measured recombination coefficients and optical properties of front surface spectral control filters which for 0.53-eV InGaAsSb TPV energy conversion are nTPV = 28% and PD = 0.85 W/cm2 at the above operating temperatures. The most severe performance limits are imposed by 1) diode open-circuit voltage (VOC) limits due to intrinsic Auger recombination and 2) parasitic photon absorption in the inactive regions of the module. Experimentally, the diode VOC is 15% below the practical limit imposed by intrinsic Auger recombination processes. Analysis of InGaAsSb diode electrical performance versus diode architecture indicates that VOC and thus efficiency are limited by extrinsic recombination processes such as through bulk defects
Optics Letters | 2005
Bien Chann; Robin K. Huang; Leo J. Missaggia; C.T. Harris; Z. L. Liau; Anish K. Goyal; J.P. Donnelly; T. Y. Fan; Antonio Sanchez-Rubio; George W. Turner
We demonstrate 35 W output peak power with M2 approximately 1.35 in both dimensions from a 100 element, 100 microm pitch slab-coupled optical waveguide laser diode array using wavelength beam combining.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2005
Paul W. Juodawlkis; Jason J. Plant; Robin K. Huang; Leo J. Missaggia; J.P. Donnelly
We report the first demonstration of a high-power semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) based on the slab-coupled optical waveguide concept. This concept allows the realization of SOAs having large fundamental optical modes, low loss, and small optical confinement factor. These attributes support large output saturation power, long length for efficient heat removal, and direct butt-coupling to single-mode fibers. The 1.5-/spl mu/m InGaAsP-InP quantum-well amplifier described here has a length of 1 cm, 1/e/sup 2/ intensity widths of 4 /spl mu/m (vertical) and 8 /spl mu/m (horizontal), a fiber-to-fiber gain of 13 dB, and a fiber-coupled output saturation power of 630 mW (+28 dBm). The measured butt-coupling efficiency between the amplifier and SMF-28 is 55%. Thus, the output saturation power of the amplifier itself is approximately 1.1 W (+31 dBm).
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2003
J.P. Donnelly; Robin K. Huang; J. N. Walpole; Leo J. Missaggia; C.T. Harris; Jason J. Plant; R.J. Bailey; D.E. Mull; W. D. Goodhue; George W. Turner
The slab-coupled optical waveguide laser (SCOWL) concept, recently proposed and demonstrated, is extended to the AlGaAs-InGaAs-GaAs material system. Both 980- and 915-nm SCOWL devices feature a nearly circular large-diameter single-spatial mode that can be butt coupled with high efficiency to a single-mode fiber. Single-ended continuous-wave output powers of greater than 1 W have been obtained at 980 nm.
Optics Letters | 2006
Jason J. Plant; Juliet T. Gopinath; Bien Chann; Daniel J. Ripin; Robin K. Huang; Paul W. Juodawlkis
We report the demonstration of a 1.5 microm InGaAsP mode-locked slab-coupled optical waveguide laser (SCOWL) producing 10 ps pulses with energies of 58 pJ and average output powers of 250 mW at a repetition rate of 4.29 GHz. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first passively mode-locked slab-coupled optical waveguide laser. The large mode and low confinement factor of the SCOWL architecture allows the realization of monolithic mode-locked lasers with high output power and pulse energy. The laser output is nearly diffraction limited with M2 values less than 1.2 in both directions.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2002
J. N. Walpole; J.P. Donnelly; Patrick J. Taylor; Leo J. Missaggia; C.T. Harris; R.J. Bailey; A. Napoleone; S. H. Groves; Stephen R. Chinn; Robin K. Huang; Jason J. Plant
A high brightness semiconductor diode laser structure, which utilizes a slab-coupled optical waveguide region to achieve several potentially important advances in performance, is proposed and experimentally demonstrated using a simple rib waveguide in an InGaAsP-InP quantum-well structure operating at 1.3-/spl mu/m wavelength. These lasers operate in a large low-aspect-ratio lowest-order spatial mode, which can be butt coupled to a single-mode fiber with high coupling efficiency.
Optics Letters | 2011
Shawn Redmond; Kevin Creedon; Jan E. Kansky; Steven J. Augst; Leo J. Missaggia; Michael K. Connors; Robin K. Huang; Bien Chann; Tso Yee Fan; George W. Turner; Antonio Sanchez-Rubio
We have demonstrated active coherent beam combination (CBC) of up to 218 semiconductor amplifiers with 38.5 W cw output using up to eleven one-dimensional 21-element individually addressable diode amplifier arrays operating at 960 nm. The amplifier array elements are slab-coupled-optical-waveguide semiconductor amplifiers (SCOWAs) set up in a master-oscillator-power-amplifier configuration. Diffractive optical elements divide the master-oscillator beam to seed multiple arrays of SCOWAs. A SCOWA was phase actuated by adjusting the drive current to each element and controlled using a stochastic-parallel-gradient-descent (SPGD) algorithm for the active CBC. The SPGD is a hill-climbing algorithm that maximizes on-axis intensity in the far field, providing phase locking without needing a reference beam.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2005
Jason J. Plant; Paul W. Juodawlkis; Robin K. Huang; J.P. Donnelly; Leo J. Missaggia; K.G. Ray
We report the demonstration of high-power semiconductor slab-coupled optical waveguide lasers (SCOWLs) operating at a wavelength of 1.5 /spl mu/m. The lasers operate with large (4/spl times/8 /spl mu/m diameter) fundamental mode and produce output power in excess of 800 mW. These structures have very low loss (/spl sim/0.5 cm/sup -1/) enabling centimeter-long devices for efficient heat removal. The large fundamental mode allows 55% butt-coupling efficiency to standard optical fiber (SMF-28). Comparisons are made between SCOWL structures having nominal 4- and 5-/spl mu/m-thick waveguides.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2007
Robin K. Huang; Bien Chann; Leo J. Missaggia; J.P. Donnelly; C.T. Harris; George W. Turner; Anish K. Goyal; Tso Yee Fan; Antonio Sanchez-Rubio
We report the wavelength beam combining of an array of high-power high-brightness 970-nm slab-coupled optical waveguide lasers. A 50-W peak power under quasi-continuous-wave (CW) operation was measured in an output beam with a beam quality of M<sub>x,y</sub> <sup>2</sup>=1.2, and 30 W under CW operation was measured with a beam quality of M<sub>x,y </sub> <sup>2</sup>=2
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Robin K. Huang; Bien Chann; James Burgess; Michael Kaiman; Robert Overman; John D. Glenn; Parviz Tayebati
TeraDiode has produced kW-class ultra-high brightness fiber-coupled direct diode lasers. A fiber-coupled direct diode laser with a power level of 2,040 W from a 50 μm core diameter, 0.15 numerical aperture (NA) output fiber at a single center wavelength was demonstrated. This was achieved with a novel beam combining and shaping technique using COTS diode lasers. The fiber-coupled output corresponds to a Beam Parameter Product (BPP) of 3.75 mm-mrad and is the lowest BPP kW-class direct diode laser yet reported. This laser is suitable for industrial materials processing applications, including sheet metal cutting and welding. This 2-kW fiber-coupled direct diode laser has comparable brightness to that of industrial fiber lasers and CO2 lasers, and is over 10x brighter than state-of-the-art direct diode lasers.