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1.
Opt Lett ; 49(7): 1794-1797, 2024 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38560865

ABSTRACT

In this work, we design and experimentally demonstrate the first, to the best of our knowledge, integrated polarization splitters and rotators at blue wavelengths. We develop compact and efficient designs for both a polarization splitter and rotator at a 422-nm wavelength, an important laser-cooling transition for 88Sr+ ions. These devices are fabricated in a 200-mm wafer-scale process and experimentally demonstrated, resulting in a measured polarization-splitter transverse-electric thru-port coupling of 98.0% and transverse-magnetic tap-port coupling of 77.6% for a compact 16-µm-long device and a polarization-rotator conversion efficiency of 92.2% for a separate compact 111-µm-long device. This work paves the way for more sophisticated integrated control of trapped-ion and neutral-atom quantum systems.

2.
Opt Express ; 27(3): 3542-3556, 2019 Feb 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30732372

ABSTRACT

We present a CMOS-compatible, Q-switched mode-locked integrated laser operating at 1.9 µm with a compact footprint of 23.6 × 0.6 × 0.78mm. The Q-switching rate is 720 kHz, the mode-locking rate is 1.2 GHz, and the optical bandwidth is 17nm, which is sufficient to support pulses as short as 215 fs. The laser is fabricated using a silicon nitride on silicon dioxide 300-mm wafer platform, with thulium-doped Al2O3 glass as a gain material deposited over the silicon photonics chip. An integrated Kerr-nonlinearity-based artificial saturable absorber is implemented in silicon nitride. A broadband (over 100 nm) dispersion-compensating grating in silicon nitride provides sufficient anomalous dispersion to compensate for the normal dispersion of the other laser components, enabling femtosecond-level pulses. The laser has no off-chip components with the exception of the optical pump, allowing for easy co-integration of numerous other photonic devices such as supercontinuum generation and frequency doublers which together potentially enable fully on-chip frequency comb generation.

3.
Opt Express ; 26(3): 2220-2230, 2018 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29401762

ABSTRACT

Laser sources in the mid-infrared are of great interest due to their wide applications in detection, sensing, communication and medicine. Silicon photonics is a promising technology which enables these laser devices to be fabricated in a standard CMOS foundry, with the advantages of reliability, compactness, low cost and large-scale production. In this paper, we demonstrate a holmium-doped distributed feedback laser monolithically integrated on a silicon photonics platform. The Al2O3:Ho3+ glass is used as gain medium, which provides broadband emission around 2 µm. By varying the distributed feedback grating period and Al2O3:Ho3+ gain layer thickness, we show single mode laser emission at wavelengths ranging from 2.02 to 2.10 µm. Using a 1950 nm pump, we measure a maximum output power of 15 mW, a slope efficiency of 2.3% and a side-mode suppression ratio in excess of 50 dB. The introduction of a scalable monolithic light source emitting at > 2 µm is a significant step for silicon photonic microsystems operating in this highly promising wavelength region.

4.
Light Sci Appl ; 7: 17131, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30839639

ABSTRACT

Efficient complementary metal-oxide semiconductor-based nonlinear optical devices in the near-infrared are in strong demand. Due to two-photon absorption in silicon, however, much nonlinear research is shifting towards unconventional photonics platforms. In this work, we demonstrate the generation of an octave-spanning coherent supercontinuum in a silicon waveguide covering the spectral region from the near- to shortwave-infrared. With input pulses of 18 pJ in energy, the generated signal spans the wavelength range from the edge of the silicon transmission window, approximately 1.06 to beyond 2.4 µm, with a -20 dB bandwidth covering 1.124-2.4 µm. An octave-spanning supercontinuum was also observed at the energy levels as low as 4 pJ (-35 dB bandwidth). We also measured the coherence over an octave, obtaining , in good agreement with the simulations. In addition, we demonstrate optimization of the third-order dispersion of the waveguide to strengthen the dispersive wave and discuss the advantage of having a soliton at the long wavelength edge of an octave-spanning signal for nonlinear applications. This research paves the way for applications, such as chip-scale precision spectroscopy, optical coherence tomography, optical frequency metrology, frequency synthesis and wide-band wavelength division multiplexing in the telecom window.

5.
Opt Lett ; 42(6): 1181-1184, 2017 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28295078

ABSTRACT

Mid-infrared laser sources are of great interest for various applications, including light detection and ranging, spectroscopy, communication, trace-gas detection, and medical sensing. Silicon photonics is a promising platform that enables these applications to be integrated on a single chip with low cost and compact size. Silicon-based high-power lasers have been demonstrated at 1.55 µm wavelength, while in the 2 µm region, to the best of our knowledge, high-power, high-efficiency, and monolithic light sources have been minimally investigated. In this Letter, we report on high-power CMOS-compatible thulium-doped distributed feedback and distributed Bragg reflector lasers with single-mode output powers up to 267 and 387 mW, and slope efficiencies of 14% and 23%, respectively. More than 70 dB side-mode suppression ratio is achieved for both lasers. This work extends the applicability of silicon photonic microsystems in the 2 µm region.

6.
Opt Express ; 22(12): 14904-12, 2014 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24977585

ABSTRACT

Long-term stable timing distribution over a 3.5-km polarization maintaining (PM) fiber link using balanced optical cross-correlators (BOC) for optical-to-optical synchronization is demonstrated. Remote laser synchronization over 40 hours showed a residual timing jitter and drift of 2.5 fs for the whole locking period and only 1.1 fs integrated from 100 µHz to 1 MHz. This result corresponds to the lowest jitter and drift achieved to date for a multi-km fiber link and remote timing synchronization operating continuously over multiple days.

7.
Opt Express ; 22(8): 9749-58, 2014 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24787859

ABSTRACT

We present a fiber-coupled balanced optical cross-correlator using waveguides in periodically-poled KTiOPO(4) (PPKTP). The normalized conversion efficiency of the waveguide device is measured to be η(0) = 1.02% / [W · cm(2)], which agrees well with theory and simulation. This result represents an expected improvement of a factor of 20 over previous bulk-optic devices. The sensitivity of the cross-correlator is characterized and shown to be comparable to the free-space bulk-optic version, with the potential for significant performance enhancements in the future.

8.
Opt Express ; 21(17): 19982-9, 2013 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24105544

ABSTRACT

Long-term stable, sub-femtosecond timing distribution over a 1.2-km polarization-maintaining (PM) fiber-optic link using balanced optical cross-correlators for link stabilization is demonstrated. Novel dispersion-compensating PM fiber was developed to construct a dispersion-slope-compensated PM link, which eliminated slow timing drifts and jumps previously induced by polarization mode dispersion in standard single-mode fiber. Numerical simulations of nonlinear pulse propagation in the fiber link confirmed potential sub-100-as timing stability for pulse energies below 70 pJ. Link operation for 16 days showed ~0.6 fs RMS timing drift and during a 3-day interval only ~0.13 fs drift, which corresponds to a stability level of 10(-21).

9.
Opt Express ; 18(13): 13321-30, 2010 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20588461

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate the generation of microwave and millimeter-wave frequencies from 26 to 100 GHz by heterodyning the output modes of a dual-wavelength fiber laser based on stimulated Brillouin scattering. The output frequency is tunable in steps of 10.3 MHz, equal to the free spectral range of the resonator. The noise properties of the beat frequency indicate a microwave linewidth of <2 Hz. We discuss potential for operation into the terahertz regime.


Subject(s)
Fiber Optic Technology/instrumentation , Fiber Optic Technology/methods , Lasers , Microwaves , Equipment Design
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