Patent · US Expired

Light emitting device with improved electrode structure to minimize short circuiting

USRE34378E · kind E · reissue

0Cited by
4References
21Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateNov 15, 1990
Grant dateSep 14, 1993
Priority date
Expiry dateNov 15, 2010

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC —)General

Abstract

A light emitting device is disclosed which includes a semiconductor block, an active layer disposed in such a fashion as to penetrate through the mutually facing end surfaces of the semiconductor block, and an electrode disposed on the main plane of the semiconductor block, wherein the electrode consists of a first electrode portion disposed along the active layer, and a second electrode portion continuing integrally the first electrode portion and having the periphery thereof out of contact from the periphery of the second main plane of the semiconductor block. A current is caused to uniformly flow through the entire active layer, and a light emitting operation is carried out stably. Since the electrode is not disposed on the periphery of the semiconductor block, the occurrence of junction short-curcuit, which might otherwise occur when a wafer is cut off to produce laser chips or when the corners of the chip break off, can be reduced.

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.