The present invention relates to a tunable laser and to a driving method of the same laser.
The method mostly accepted today for optical coherence tomography (OCT) is based on sweeping the frequency of a narrow band laser, usually termed as a swept source. Several principles of sweeping the laser emission have been developed. The most common principle employed is that of a spectral filter in a closed loop, where the tunable laser apparatus uses a Fabry-Perot filter, as disclosed in Patent Document 1 (US 2003/6538748 B1), a polygon filter, as disclosed in Patent Document 2 (US 2009/7489713 B2), or a micro electrical mechanical scanning (MEMS) filter, as disclosed in Patent Document 3 (US 2012/8275008 B2). Commercial vendors exist, such as Axsun and Santec, companies using MEMS filters. Such filters limit the tuning to several hundreds of kHz. In Non-Patent Document 1 (R. H. Huber et al, “Fourier domain mode-locking (FDML): A new laser operating regime and applications for optical coherence tomography”, Optics Express 14(8), 3225-3237 (2006)), a large tuning frequency has been reported using Fabry-Perot filters and principles of Fourier domain mode-locking (FDML) that allowed sweeping rates exceeding several MHz. However, the reliability of Fabry-Perot and the complexity of buffering limit the applicability of such principles. The filters mentioned above are based on mechanical movement of parts which limits their reliability. Therefore, there is an interest in akinetic laser sources that achieve tuning with no mechanical movement of parts. On the other hand, in modern applications of OCT there is an increasing demand in three dimensional imaging at high speed, with increased axial range.
An akinetic solution, based on the principle of dispersion tuning, is illustrated in the Non-Patent Document 2 (S. Yamashita, M. Asano, “Wide and fast wavelength-tunable mode-locked fiber laser based on dispersion tuning”, Optics Express 14(20), 9399-9306 (2006)). This method has limited tunability, due to the significant decrease in output power when driving it at high frequency repetition rates.
In Patent Document 5 (US 2013/8605768 B2), a solution to the previous problem is presented, which includes a positive dispersion region, a negative dispersion region and two modulators in a ring resonator, assembly which brings the amount of wavelength dispersion to approximately zero. This solution relies though only on externally driven modulation units, like acousto-optic or electro-optic modulators, for example.
In Non-Patent Document 3 (Y. Takubo, S. Yamashita, “High-speed dispersion-tuned wavelength-swept fiber laser using a reflective SOA and a chirped FBG”, Optics Express Vol. 21, No. 4, 5130-5139 (2013)), a wavelength swept fiber laser apparatus using a chirped fiber Bragg grating as dispersive medium is presented. Although the tuning wavelength range obtained is broad, the OCT imaging speed achieved was only up to 250 kHz, which is below the values demanded by modern swept source OCT applications.
In Non-Patent Document 4 (R. Stancu et. al, “Versatile Swept Source With Adjustable Coherence Length”, IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, Vol. 26, Issue 16, 1629-1632 (2014)), it is shown how the laser linewidth can be varied by driving the SOA in a dispersive laser cavity at different mode-locking frequencies. The sweeping frequency could not exceed a few tens of kHz.
Therefore, there is an interest in developing akinetic swept lasers that can address the disadvantages of the solutions presented above, first in providing much larger tuning speeds.
To make distinction between our invention and prior art, it is essential to note that the akinetic solutions presented above present the following characteristics. There are multiple values of the RF carriers that can be used, and the RF signal is tuned around such carrier values, differing by the inverse of the roundtrip. Around each such RF carrier, there is a tuning bandwidth and solutions presented above consist in tuning the RF signal within a single such band.
In the present invention, the RF tuning is practised over many such bands. More specifically, two resonant modulation effects are applied. A first modulation that induces mode-locking is imposed by driving the optical gain medium at a high radio frequency value. A second modulation is applied, inspired from the practice of Fourier domain mode-locking applied to Fabry-Perot lasers, where sweeping is performed at a rate close to the inverse roundtrip of the wave in the cavity. In opposition to the prior art where the sweeping has to be performed at the exact inverse of the roundtrip, the method disclosed here essentially uses a detuning of the excitation from the inverse of the roundtrip. Let us refer from now on to the inverse of the roundtrip as to the resonance frequency in the cavity, fR.
Essential for the operation of the akinetic laser according to the invention are two characteristics: (i) the frequency of the signal, fm, applied to mode-lock the laser is a large multiple N of fR and is deviated over a large tuning band, covering as many as b multiples of fR and (ii) the rate at which fS is tuned (the second modulation) is slightly detuned from the multiple M of the resonant frequency fR, where M is a small number, 1, 2, . . . 10. Due to the large deviation of fS, the characteristic (i), makes the invention different from the technology presented in the Non-Patent Document 2 (S. Yamashita, M. Asano), in the Non-Patent Document 3 (Y. Takubo, S. Yamashita) and in the Non-patent documents 4 (R. Stancu, David A. Jackson, Adrian Podoleanu) mentioned above. The characteristic (ii), due to the slight detuning from MfR, makes the invention different from the technology protected by Patent Document 1 (US 2003/6538748 B1), Patent Document 2 (US 2009/7489713 B2), and Patent Document 3 (US 2012/8275008 B2). By doing so, the driving method described in this invention can improve the scanning speed of an akinetic laser apparatus based on a dispersive cavity from hundreds of kHz to over several MHz.
In a first aspect, the present invention discloses a method and apparatuses to implement an akinetic swept source that can operate at a much faster sweeping speed, with considerable higher power output.
In a second aspect, the invention discloses a laser apparatus based on a ring resonator, which includes an optical gain amplifier and a dispersive mean.
In a third aspect, the invention discloses a laser apparatus based on an in-line resonator, which includes an optical gain amplifier and a dispersive mean.
In a fourth aspect, a driving method for the apparatus is disclosed, that can determine a fast tunable narrowband laser emission, tuned at multiple M of the resonant frequency, fR.
Further characteristics of the present invention will be detailed from the following exemplary embodiments described, supported by attached drawings.
The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the present invention, as to its structure, organization, use and method of operation, together with further objectives and advantages thereof, will be better understood from the following drawings in which preferred embodiments of the invention will be illustrated by ways of example. It is expressly understood, however, that the drawings are for the purpose of illustration and description only and are not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention. Embodiments of this invention will now be described in association with the accompanying drawings in which:
In continuation, embodiments of the present invention will be detailed. Various features of the present invention, as well as other objects and advantages, are set forth in the following description and the accompanying drawings in which the same reference numerals depict the same or similar elements.
Such a regime has been reported in the Non-Patent Document 2 (S. Yamashita, M. Asano), in Non-Patent Document 3 (Y. Takubo, S. Yamashita) and in Non-patent document 4 (R. Stancu et al). The selection of optical frequency, determined by the value of RF according to
Due to dispersion, the index of refraction in the laser cavity depends on the optical frequency and therefore, fR is different for different optical frequencies. By changing the frequency of the signal modulating the gain in the cavity, the optical frequency can be swept. The resonance frequency of the ring laser cavity is defined as:
where c represents the speed of light in vacuum, n is the refractive index of the cavity and L is the laser cavity length. The chromatic dispersion in the cavity can be defined for n as a function of wavelength λ or optical frequency ν. When a frequency fm modulates the gain in a dispersive cavity, a 1st mode-locking mechanism is induced at the inverse of the roundtrip of light in the cavity. The wavelength tuning range Δλ is expressed as:
where fm0 is the central mode-locking frequency, n0 is the refractive index at the central optical frequency emitted, D is the dispersion parameter of the ring, and Δfm represents the change in the modulation frequency. Maximum tuning range, Δλmax, limited by the frequency spectral range (FSR), is given by:
The equations above are known by those skilful in art of mode-locking dispersive cavities.
Novel and interesting behaviour is achieved by driving the locking mechanism 1 with signal 41 deviated in frequency over several locking bands, engaging in this way frequencies from different locking bands, according to the invention, as exemplified in the following figures.
The large frequency deviation VCO 4, generates a signal 41 to mode-locking mechanism block 1, that can be deviated in its frequency Δfm, over a much larger bandwidths than in the prior art, over many multiple values, b, of the fR. The coefficient b determines the number of resolved points in the spectrum. Therefore, specialised high frequency VCOs are required by the invention, that can generate GHz signals with deviations over tens and even hundreds of MHz. The large frequency deviation VCO 4 replaces the small frequency deviation VCO 40. Embodiments for such specialised VCOs are illustrated in
As another difference from the prior art, the signal 71 delivered by the large voltage sweeping generator, 7, needs to cover larger voltage swings than those delivered by the small voltage sweeping generator 70, in order to drive the large frequency deviation VCO 4.
As yet another difference, the frequency fS of the signal 71 is detuned by 8f, from multiple values, M, of the resonance frequency, fR. The driving of the VCO 4 by the signal 71 at a frequency close to MfR represents the 2nd locking (resonance) mechanism typical for the invention (but at a frequency fS that differs from MfR).
In order to accomplish such functionality, a controller 8 is used to drive the sweeping generator 7. The controller is instructed by three parameters: fR, 8f and b.
The larger the voltage applied to the sweeping generator 7, as controlled by the controller 8, the larger the deviation in frequency, Δfm, of the VCO 4 and this determines the number of resolved spectral points b=Δfm/fR. The controller also determines how large is the deviation 8f of the frequency fS of the signal generated by the sweeping generator 7, from the resonance frequency, fR. The larger the detuning 8f, the wider is the tuning bandwidth, Δν. The third parameter input to the controller 8, the resonance frequency fR is measured according to modalities known in the art. This can be evaluated by modulating the mode-locking mechanism block, 1, with sinusoidal signal of variable frequency, the minimum frequency where a maximum is registered is the frequency fR. Alternatively, by using a large gain amplifier for the signal photodetected from the laser that is reapplied for positive feedback to the mode-locking mechanism, the laser starts pulsating at fR. It is supposed from now on in the disclosure that one of these two modalities are used to determine the frequency fR which is then used as input for the controller 8.
The laser output optical tuning bandwidth Δλ is given by:
where Cm is a cavity coefficient and Δfm represents the frequency tuning range of the VCO 4.
There is a number of optical modes in the cavity defined by ν0/fR=m0.
Mode-locking is induced by driving the mode-locking mechanism block 1 with signal 41 pulsating at fm0. There is a number of RF modes, R, in the same cavity, where fm0/fR=R0.
Each tuning band is characterised by the same number of optical modes but by a different number of RF modes in the cavity, R. If fm is stepped in steps of fS=fR, then for the next higher fm frequency, the number of RF modes increased by 1 to R0+1, where (fm0+fR)/fR=R0+1.
In this particular case, on each band, the RF frequency of the driving signal is exactly in the middle of each band, exactly fitting an integer multiple, R, of fR and therefore determining the same optical frequency, Vo. The same optical frequency of the optical signal generated results, irrespective of the RF frequency of the driving signal, modified in steps of the resonance frequency fR. At each new step, although a signal of a different radio frequency is sent to the mode-locking mechanism block 1, the same optical frequency, ν0 is generated. For the novel method disclosed here, it is important to note that monochromatic optical emission is obtained, if the mode-locking mechanism block 1 is driven at fm0, signal which is swept at a frequency fS=fR. This is because when an oscillator at fm0 is swept at fS, its spectrum consists in a comb of discrete frequencies distanced by the sweeping frequency, fS. If fS=fR, then despite the fact that fm is swept over a large bandwidth Δfm=fm,max−fm,min, irrespective of the sweeping band, each characterised by a different R, the optical emission is monochromatic, as shown at the top of
(i): static, unique RF signal is sequentially applied to the mode-locking mechanism block 1, and the same ν0 optical frequency is obtained, where sequentially, the frequency of signal 41 is stepped by fR, as shown in
(ii): dynamic, fm0 is swept at a rate fS=fR. As the bands where mode-locking takes place are separated by fR, the number of bands covered by frequency sweeping fm can be approximately estimated as B=Δfm/fR. Irrespective of the number B of bands, the laser emits the frequency ν0 only. The case (ii) also implies that the RF fm is tuned within a bandwidth Δfm that exceeds the extension of individual locking bands, δfm. This represents a first distinctive characteristic of the method presented in the invention, according to which the RF is swept at much larger deviations than the RF bandwidth for each band, δfm.
So the RF jumps by fR+δf and the optical frequency jumps by b(νo/fm0)δf from νo. By doing so, in the spirit of the invention, a small deviation in the sweeping speed from resonance, δf, is multiplied by a large number, b, to implement a large tuning optical bandwidth, Δνm. In other words, if the detuning δf reaches the RF deviation of the locking band, measured statically, δfm, then the same tuning bandwidth Δνm would be achieved for b=1. However this is not achievable in practice, as the dynamic tuning band is less than the static tuning bandy. By tuning over b locking bands, S resolvable points in the tuning spectrum, Δνm are achieved.
When tuning at a rate fS, the number of resolved points is δfm/fS.
Let us say that we use the conventional 1st locking mechanism only. If fS is much smaller than δfm, for instance fS=10 Hz and δfm=10 kHz, then there are sufficient spectral points in the tuned spectrum, 1000. If however fS reaches the resonance frequency fR, due to the fact that δfm<fR, δfm/fS becomes less than 1, therefore the only way to secure a sufficient number of points in the spectrum is by jumping over several locking bands, b, that leads to the spirit of this invention.
As above, two scenarios are possible:
Static, case (i), where a signal with an RF frequency as shown in
Equally, the same set of optical frequencies is obtainable by sweeping the frequency to induce mode-locking at fS rate, case (ii). In this case, a detuned rate from resonance is used, with fS=fR+δf.
In continuation, examples of the present invention will be described.
As a practical implementation, a SOA, 1, 2, type SOA-L-C-14-FCA, BT CIP 1 that operates at 1550 nm, maximum current 600 mA and 3 dB bandwidth larger than 50 nm is used. As 3a, a DCF with a dispersion parameter DDCF=−140 ps/nm/km at 1550 nm is used. The DCF provides chromatic dispersion in the laser cavity needed for dispersion tuning and the 1st resonance mechanism. The combination of the negative dispersion due to the DCF of length LDCF=200 m with the positive dispersion DSMF=15 ps/nm·km at 1550 nm, due to the single mode fibre of length LSMF=10 m, determines a net negative dispersion of: LDCFDDCF+LSMFDSMF=−30 ps/nm.
By using a variable frequency RF signal generator instead of 7, the cavity resonance frequency, fR is found as 800 kHz. This corresponds to the inverse of the round trip in the ring, i.e.:
L/(c/n)=1/fR=1/(800 kHz), so using c=3·108 m/s and n=1.5, L=250 m, where L represents the total optical path length in the cavity.
A controller 8 is used to drive the sweeping generator 7 and it is instructed by three parameters: fR, δf and b.
Then as a large frequency deviation voltage controlled oscillator 4, a VCO (Mini-Circuits type ZX-368-S+) in series with a power amplifier (Mini-Circuits, ZFL-2500VH+) are used. This can allow an extremely wide frequency deviation, Δfm=60 MHz (in a range from fm,min=360 MHz for 0 V to fm,max=420 MHz) for a voltage variation at its input of 10 V. A large voltage sweeping generator 7, which delivers a saw-tooth sweeping signal 71 of 5V amplitude and 2.5 V bias is used to drive the frequency deviation of the large frequency deviation VCO 4.
When a sweeping rate of fS=fR=800 kHz is applied from an RF sweeping generator 7 to the VCO 4, the VCO is tuned from fm to fm+fR, to fm+2fR, to fm+3fR and so on, in the 360-420 MHz range, i.e. in 800 kHz steps. The resulting RF signal from the VCO, 4, is amplified and injected into the mode-locking mechanism block (SOA 1, 2). This generates a narrow band laser output, as depicted in
To shed more light into the operation of the akinetic swept laser according to the invention, the effect of detuning the RF from fR, δf, on the optical bandwidth Δλ, expressed in nm, as a positive effect, and on the optical power, as a negative effect, is illustrated in
In
Combination of even lower central frequency VCOs can be used to obtain a larger frequency deviation, such as for example, VCO 11 (Mini-Circuits type ZH95-1790-S+) and VCO 12 (Mini-Circuits, type ZH95-1240-S+) to deliver at the 41 output an RF of 500 MHz fm, deviated by 200 MHz Δfm.
In
For further control of the sweeping and enhanced stability, the signal delivered to the output 16 during the turnaround time intervals of signal 71 is clamped using a synchronised switch, 23, according to the diagram shown in
In the second example, the operation of the basic ring cavity swept laser, as shown in
As a particular example, a system according to
The output optical emission is drawn out through splitter 5, a single mode coupler of 50/50, with 50% extracted out of the cavity through the optical channel 6.
By using a variable frequency RF signal generator, replacing large frequency deviation generator 4, the cavity resonance frequency, fR is found as 200 kHz. This corresponds to the inverse of the round trip in the ring, i.e. to:
L/(c/n)=1/fR=1/(200 kHz), so using c=3·108 m/s and n=1.5, L=1000 m, where L represents the total optical path length in the cavity.
A saw-tooth sweeping signal of 5 V amplitude and 2.5 V bias, signal 71, is generated by an RF synthesizer, as large voltage sweeping generator 7 and applied to a large frequency deviation voltage controlled oscillator (VCO), type ZX95-368+, 4. The RF tuning range of the VCO is Δfm=60 MHz (in a range from fm,min=360 MHz for 0 V to fm,max=420 MHz for 10 V).
When a sweeping rate of fS=fR=200 kHz as signal 71 is applied from large voltage sweeping generator 7 to the large frequency deviation VCO 4, this is tuned from fm to fm+fR, to fm+2fR, to fm+3fR and so on, in the 360-420 MHz range, i.e. in 200 kHz steps. Similar results as above are obtained, with a linewidth of around 60 pm and a repetition rate of 200 kHz.
In
As dispersive means, a dispersion compensating fibre, as 3a in
In the third example, the operation of an akinetic swept laser based on the present invention which utilizes length doubling of a dispersive medium is described.
The RF signal 41 is applied to the SOA 1, 2 via a radio frequency input 80 (bias tee). The dispersing means 3 consists in a circulator, 52, that directs light through a DCF length 3a, terminated on a broadband Faraday rotating mirror, 53). The purpose of 53 is to cancel the polarization effects inside the laser cavity and to double the length of the cavity. Such a configuration is of low cost due to the need of half of DCF length to obtain the same dispersion. The output optical emission is drawn out through splitter 5, and then amplified by a booster, 6.
To implement practically the embodiment in
By changing the dc value of the signal 71 delivered by the large voltage generator 7, the central frequency fm of the large frequency deviation generator 4 can be tuned statically. Sweeping rates achieved are no more than a few tens of kHz that exhibit sufficient output optical power, as represented in
The cavity length determines fR=782 kHz and the VCO 4 is driven initially with a signal 71 of frequency fm in the range 360-420 MHz. When the signal applied to 4, 71, is swept at a sweeping rate of fS=fR, then the VCO 4 spectrum consists in a comb of frequencies fm±fR, fm±2fR, fm±3fR and so on, i.e. in 782 kHz steps. This generates a narrow band laser output, having a linewidth 5× and fR repetition rate. If fS=fR, no tuning is noticed again, as documented in
When the frequency of signal 71 driving the large frequency deviation generator 4 is swept at a rate fS=fR=782 kHz a narrow laser optical emission results (graph 18a in
In
Without any optical amplification, the output power of the source is 2.3 mW. Using the SOA booster, 6, driven at 300 mA, an output power of 12.8 mW is measured. A trade-off is established between output power and percentage of amplified spontaneous emission.
For the mode-locking frequency fm0 of 920.4 MHz, swept at fS=792 KHz, a laser output optical bandwidth Δλ of 16 nm, as shown in
For the presented case, the following elements of the equation (4) are constant: fR, Cm and δλ. This means that the output bandwidth measured at half of the previous detuning, of 5 kHz for a specific value of Δfm, will give half of the optical bandwidth. For example, for a 2.5 Vpp signal driving the VCO 4, corresponding to ΔF=20 MHz, a Δλ value of 7.86 nm is measured for δfR=5 kHz, and respectively 15.24 nm at 10 kHz. In the prior art, the RF frequency 41 of the large deviation frequency generator 4 is tuned within one locking band. In the spirit of the invention, the VCO 4 is tuned over many such locking bands, separated by fR.
Let us consider equation (4), if for fR we have a value of Δλ, then at NfR, Δλ=Δλ/N. Let us consider the following example: 3 Vpp signal 71 driving the VCO 4, a 15.75 nm Δλ value of the optical output 6 is measured for δfR=10 kHz detuning from fR. Let us now consider δfR=10 kHz detuning, modulating the VCO 4 at sweeping rates of 2 fR (1.564 MHz), 3 fR (2.346 MHz), 4 fR (3.128 MHz) and 5 fR (3.910 MHz). The optical tuning bandwidth Δλ of the signal at the output of the booster 6 is measured as 7.9 nm, 5.5 nm, 4.2 nm and, respectively, 3.2 nm. The proportional reduction in the tuning bandwidth by N is accompanied by insignificant power variation.
The maximum deviation in frequency is 782 kHz, then at a fS sweep rate, the RF spectrum is made from a comb of frequencies distanced by multiples of fS around the carrier at fm. The number of resolved frequency points within the spectrum, b, is given by the maximum frequency deviation, Δfm, divided by fS. Δfm depends on the swing of the signal 71 delivered by the large voltage generator 7 to the input of 4. If fS=1 kHz, maximum achievable number of resolved point b=782. When driving the laser at a rate fR, the only way to maintain a large number of resolved frequency points is by jumping the optical frequency of the swept source from one tuning band to the next, in steps of fR. This means that a deviation of frequency as high as b·fR=782.782=611.52 MHz would be needed.
The curve shown in
The foregoing disclosure has been presented for the sake of illustration and description only. As such, it is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed.
The person skilled in the art should realise that without departing from the scope of the invention, modulation of nonlinearities in the cavity can be achieved by using a modulator, as mode-locking mechanism block 1, separated from the optical amplifier, 2, as detailed in
Here the optical amplifier is shown using optical isolators to reduce feedback in the active medium. The person skilled in the art should be aware that other means of isolation exists, such as using circulators, or configurations may be devised that tolerate light traveling both ways, in which case no isolator is used.
The succession of elements in the laser cavity is not a feature of the invention and any other arrangement can equally be considered in the spirit of the invention.
Other modifications and alterations may be used in the design and manufacture of the swept laser of the present invention and in the application of the methods disclosed without departing from the spirit and scope of the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1501502.7 | Jan 2015 | GB | national |