GaAs-based narrow-stripe broad-area lasers with integrated surface gratings are shown to operate with high power and efficiency, low beam parameter product (BPP), and narrow spectra. These distributed feedback lasers are constructed using a surface-etched, 80th-order grating, leading to spectral width
(95% power) and wavelength
. Optical output powers
and power conversion efficiencies
comparable with devices without grating are enabled by a small coupling coefficient,
, consistent with coupled mode theory calculations. The lasers were constructed with a stripe width of 30
, enabling BPP
mrad up to 6-W output power, improved over devices without gratings, that show BPP
mrad. We attribute the improvement to spatial filtering of higher order lateral modes by the narrow surface grating. Such devices are attractive sources for use in spectral beam combination systems for material processing.