A short wavelength laser offers unique opportunities in high density optical
recording as well as in laser printing. To achieve a compact blue laser, the
current effort worldwide is primarily concentrated on achieving
well-conducting p-type ZnSe and fabricating quantum well heterostructures so
as to achieve a low threshold laser at room temperature. The recent
milestone ‘an injection blue laser below room temperature’ gives us
confidence that indeed we are on the right path. In photopumped lasers in
various II-VI heterostructures, thresholds at room temperature comparable to
the theoretical limit have been reported. This not only reinforces that
indeed a room temperature injection laser is possible but when combined with
earlier electron-beam pumped laser results, a scanned compact laser is also
feasible.
In recent years several breakthroughs have demonstrated that an infrared
emitting GaAs laser can be used to generate blue light through efficient
second harmonic generation (SHG) in certain non-linear optical materials.
Recent exciting results on SHG of GaAs lasers in KTP grating waveguides
resulted in a blue laser with output power in the range of several
milliwatts. Alternative schemes such as upconversion lasers and SHG in III-V
quantum wells structures are presented.
In summary, various efforts to achieve compact blue lasers and their
availability in the near future are presented.