1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a method for optimizing a hyperfine aperiodic optical superlattice. More particularly, the present invention relates to a method for optimizing a hyperfine aperiodic optical superlattice that is for phase-matching engineering of the nonlinear wavelength conversion process.
2. Description of Related Art
Quasi-phase-matching (QPM) in ferroelectric materials has been widely used in plenty of wavelength conversion processes for achieving phase-matching (PM). In an application of gas sensing using several absorption lines and a high-sensitivity ultrashort pulse measurement, one needs discrete phase-matching (PM) peaks at pre-specified positions and a continuous PM spectrum with broad bandwidth, respectively. There have been some techniques, such as aperiodic optical superlattice (AOS) optimized by simulated annealing (SA) and nonperiodic optical superlattice (NOS) optimized by genetic algorithm (GA), capable of achieving arbitrary discrete PM peaks. However, the performances (conversion efficiency, spectral fidelity, and complexity of target PM peaks) of SA and GA are subjected to the limited number of unit blocks or domains, and no continuous PM spectrum has been demonstrated accordingly.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a method for optimizing a hyperfine aperiodic optical superlattice (HAOS) is provided. The method includes the steps as follows. The HAOS is divided into a plurality of unit blocks with the same length, wherein the unit blocks has same spatial distribution of domain orientation, and the HAOS with an original conversion efficiency. An inversion step is performed for inverting the spatial distribution of domain orientation of one of the unit blocks. A calculation step is performed for calculating an achieved conversion efficiency from a fundamental wavelength into a target wavelength of the HAOS which has the one of the unit blocks with the inverted spatial distribution of domain orientation. A comparison step is performed for comparing the achieved conversion efficiency with a target conversion efficiency. The inversion step, the calculation step and the comparison step performed on the others unit blocks are iterated block by block. The HAOS with the achieved conversion efficiency which is closest to the target conversion efficiency is selected as an optimized HAOS.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a system for optimizing a hyperfine aperiodic optical superlattice (HAOS) is disclosed. The system includes a receiving module, a calculating module, a comparing module and a selecting module. The receiving module receives the HAOS data and divides the HAOS into a plurality of unit blocks with the same length wherein the unit blocks has same spatial distribution of domain orientation, and the HAOS with an original conversion efficiency. The calculating module is connected to the receiving module and calculates an achieved conversion efficiency of the HAOS which has the one of the unit blocks with an inverted spatial distribution of domain orientation, wherein the spatial distribution of domain orientation of each of the unit blocks is inverted block by block. The comparing module is connected to the calculating module, wherein the comparing module is used for comparing the achieved conversion efficiency with a target conversion efficiency. The selecting module is connected to the comparing module, wherein the selecting module selects he HAOS with the achieved conversion efficiency which is closest to the target conversion efficiency as an optimized HAOS.
The invention can be more fully understood by reading the following detailed description of the embodiment, with reference made to the accompanying drawings as follows:
Moreover, the method can further include the steps as follows. The inversion step 120, the calculation step 130, and the comparison step 140 are iterated under the conversion with a plurality of fundamental wavelengths block by block. Then, the achieved conversion efficiencies from the fundamental wavelengths of one HAOS with the inverted spatial distribution of domain orientation of the unit block are summed up. Furthermore, a record step is for recording the achieved conversion efficiency which is closest to the target conversion efficiency after the comparison step 140. When one achieved conversion efficiency is closer to the target conversion efficiency than another achieved conversion efficiency, the closer achieved conversion efficiency can be recorded. Then, when step 140 is iterated and generated another achieved conversion efficiency which is closer to the target conversion efficiency, the recorded achieved conversion efficiency would be replaced.
The receiving module 310 receives the HAOS data (such as length, material and temperature etc.) and divides the HAOS into a plurality of unit blocks with the same length. For an example, the HAOS is a LiNbO3 crystal with length L and be divided into N unit blocks with the same length dx. Each of the unit blocks has the same spatial distribution of domain orientation, and the HAOS with an original conversion efficiency.
The calculating module 320 is connected to the receiving module 310 and calculates a conversion efficiency of the HAOS which has the one of the unit blocks with an inverted spatial distribution of domain orientation. In detail, the present disclosure provides the system for optimizing a HAOS by an iterative domino (ID) algorithm. Without loss of generality, if the pump is non-depleted, the conversion efficiency of the LiNbO3 crystal at a fundamental wavelength λ is given by:
wherein ηnorm(λ) is the normalized efficiency in units of %/W, Δk (a function of λ) is the wave vector mismatch, and d(x) represents the spatial distribution of domain orientations.
For HAOS, the reduced effective nonlinear coefficient dR-eff can be rewritten as:
wherein δn(=1 or −1) and xn=n·dx denote the orientation and right boundary of the nth unit block, respectively; and zn(Δk) is a complex number contributed by the nth unit at the fundamental wavelength λ corresponding to some wave vector mismatch Δk.
When one of the N blocks (say the qth unit block) of the sample is inverted, i.e. δq′=−δq, the reduced effective nonlinear coefficient (thus the conversion efficiency) can be written as:
d′
R-eff
=d
R-eff−2zq(Δk). Eq. (5)
Therefore, the calculating module 320 calculates the conversion efficiency with the inverted spatial distribution of domain orientation as dR-eff′=dR-eff−2zq(Δk) block by block.
The comparing module 330 is connected to the calculating module 320. The comparing module 330 is used for comparing the achieved conversion efficiency with a target conversion efficiency. In the comparing module 330, a fitness function F is set as:
wherein p is a positive integer which can increase the difference of the shape of each fitness function (p takes 16 in general), α is the α th target wavelength which would be converted from the fundamental wavelength, ηα(0)(Σnα(0)=1) and ηα represent the target conversion efficiency and the achieved conversion efficiency normalized to the peak efficiency η0, of a periodic QPM grating of the same length L. Therefore, the F represents the comparing result between the target conversion efficiency and the achieved conversion efficiency; in other words, F represents how the achieved conversion efficiency closes to the target conversion efficiency. When F is smaller, the achieved conversion efficiency is better (“better” means the achieved conversion efficiency is closer to the target conversion efficiency), that is, the inverted spatial distribution of domain orientation is better. When F is larger, the achieved conversion efficiency is worse. Furthermore, the overall efficiency ηtot≡Σα=1Mηα and the average shape error Δη≡Σα=1M|ηα−ntot×ηα(0)|/ηtot also can quantitatively measure the performance of the HAOS.
The selecting module 350 is connected to the comparing module 330. The selecting module 350 selects the HAOS with the achieved conversion efficiency which is closest to the target conversion efficiency as an optimizing HAOS.
The system of
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the structure of the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. In view of the foregoing, it is intended that the present invention cover modifications and variations of this invention provided they fall within the scope of the following claims.