This disclosure relates generally to systems, methods, and structures for improved supercontinuum generation (SCG).
Recently, supercontinuum generation—a process by which laser light is converted to light exhibiting a very broad spectral bandwidth, i.e., a very low temporal coherence and a super-wide continuous optical spectrum—has become of great interest as such supercontinuum sources have found applicability in a wide array of important contemporary applications including medical diagnostics, environmental detection/analysis, light detection and ranging (LiDAR), and optical communications such as via frequency combs—among others.
Given the utility, importance, and necessity of supercontinuum generation to such applications, systems, methods, and structures for improve supercontinuum generation would represent a welcome addition to the art.
An advance in the art is made according to aspects of the present disclosure directed to systems, methods, and structures for improved supercontinuum generation that advantageously and repeatedly re-shapes pulse(s) during, before or after nonlinear generation such that it maintains an ideal temporal shape for enhanced spectral generation.
Advantageously, systems, methods, and structures according to the present disclosure increase the spectral bandwidth of SCG well beyond those achieved in the art, while maintaining coherence in generation.
In sharp contrast to the prior art—instead of maintaining a spatially uniform or tapered waveguide dispersion along the propagation length—systems, methods, and structures according to aspects of the present disclosure alternate the dispersion of a length of waveguide via changing (alternating) segments of normal and anomalous dispersion waveguide segments.
By configuring a chain of such alternating segments with an appropriate length distribution, systems, methods, and structures according to the present disclosure advantageously and surprisingly impose alternating temporal focusing and defocusing thereby avoiding soliton formation, spectral narrowing, as well as loss of peak intensity, while self-phase modulation increases the spectral bandwidth without undesirable spectral clamping.
A more complete understanding of the present disclosure may be realized by reference to the accompanying drawing in which:
The illustrative embodiments are described more fully by the Figures and detailed description. Embodiments according to this disclosure may, however, be embodied in various forms and are not limited to specific or illustrative embodiments described in the drawing and detailed description.
The following merely illustrates the principles of the disclosure. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the disclosure and are included within its spirit and scope.
Furthermore, all examples and conditional language recited herein are intended to be only for pedagogical purposes to aid the reader in understanding the principles of the disclosure and the concepts contributed by the inventor(s) to furthering the art and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions.
Moreover, all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the disclosure, as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass both structural and functional equivalents thereof. Additionally, it is intended that such equivalents include both currently known equivalents as well as equivalents developed in the future, i.e., any elements developed that perform the same function, regardless of structure.
Thus, for example, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that any block diagrams herein represent conceptual views of illustrative circuitry embodying the principles of the disclosure.
Unless otherwise explicitly specified herein, the FIGs comprising the drawing are not drawn to scale.
As those skilled in the art will appreciate upon understanding our disclosure, we present a new approach to supercontinuum generation that alternates the sign, and with it possibly also the shape and strength, of dispersion along a length of a waveguide. We demonstrate our technique by showing a substantial bandwidth enhancement in a standard, step-index fiber including a chain of fiber segments configured such that dispersion alternates repeatedly between normal and anomalous. As we disclose, systems, methods and structures for supercontinuum generation—according to the present disclosure—are particularly well suited for integrated optical supercontinuum generation and the plethora of applications that arise from such advancement.
We begin by noting supercontinuum generation (SCG) in waveguides is one of the most intriguing phenomena in non-linear optics due to its unique potential for combining broad spectral bandwidth with high coherence and power efficiency. Of particular interest and advantage, output may be spectrally centered in the mid-infrared to ultraviolet regions as determined by specific optical materials, waveguide dispersion, and pump laser wavelength employed.
Contemporary SCG involves a single-pass nonlinear conversion in optical fibers providing usually negative (anomalous) group velocity dispersion, possibly also positive (normal) group velocity dispersion. More recently SC has been generated in integrated optical waveguides as well. In certain resonant systems the same underlying phenomena form the basis for broadband frequency comb generation (Kerr comb generation). In each of these situations, achieving an output exhibiting a large bandwidth and high coherence is necessary when employing same in such applications as microwave photonics, sensing and precision metrology.
As those skilled in the art will understand and appreciate however, while the spectral bandwidth in SCG can reach even several hundreds of THz in specific cases while realizing a high conversion efficiency, ultimately, the bandwidth remains clamped, that is to say it cannot exceed a certain range without significant loss of coherence. When employing anomalous dispersion—which is a common technique used in broadband SCG—the process initially benefits from dispersive pulse compression (temporal focusing), but spectral clamping is inherent to subsequent soliton formation.
Beyond these limits, it is known that further broadening can be achieved via employing Raman interaction, four-wave mixing and dispersive wave (DW) generation. Unfortunately, these processes generate either narrowband radiation (DW) or are prone to low coherence, e.g., due to the influence of vacuum fluctuations, modulation instability, or stochastic soliton fission. And while solitons are not formed when employing normal dispersion in SCG, however, spectral clamping remains inherent because pump pulses become temporally stretched (defocused) and lose their peak intensity with increasing propagation length.
Alternating Dispersion Supercontinuum Generation
Accordingly, we disclose and describe herein a novel approach for increasing the spectral bandwidth of SCG—and surprisingly—well beyond named limits, while maintaining coherence in generation.
Such SCG is realized according to aspects of the present disclosure—in sharp contrast to prior art techniques that generally maintain a spatially uniform or tapered waveguide dispersion along a propagation length—by alternating the dispersion via changing waveguide segments of normal (ND segment) and anomalous dispersion (AD segment) as shown schematically in
More specifically,
With initial reference now to
At this point we note that as used herein, a waveguide is any structure that guides waves, such as electromagnetic waves, with minimal loss of energy by restricting expansion to selected dimension(s). Of particular interest to this disclosure—are optical waveguides that guide electromagnetic waves in an optical portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Such optical waveguides include both optical fiber and rectangular as well as non-rectangular (i.e., integrated) waveguides that are constructed to be spatially inhomogeneous such that the spatial region in which light propagates therein is restricted. As will be known by those skilled in the art, such optical waveguides will include a region exhibiting a different refractive index from surrounding region(s).
We further note—with respect to the illustrative figures—that as shown illustratively is an ND segment as the first segment in the chain of segments. Those skilled in the art will know and appreciate that the characteristic of the first segment may be either ND or AD, so long as the alternating characteristic along the length of the waveguide structure is maintained. As we shall describe further, which particular segment provides focusing and which provides defocusing will be a matter of design choice and configuration according to aspects of the present disclosure.
As we shall show and describe, systems, methods, and structures employing dielectric waveguides or more specifically planar optical waveguides may advantageously be employed according to the present disclosure. Such planar waveguide structures benefit significantly from silicon waveguide processing techniques, processes, and materials that continue to advance at an accelerating pace.
Finally, with returning reference to
To illustratively demonstrate our approach, we show a bandwidth enhancement of SC generation in a dispersion segmented optical fiber chain configured according to aspects of the present disclosure. Note that such demonstration is only illustrative and in no way limiting.
Those skilled in the art will readily understand and appreciate that salient effects of SCG important to our approach include self-phase modulation (SPM), dispersion, and the dynamics resulting from the interplay of these two effects. Via the intensity-dependent Kerr effect, SPM generates a coherent broadening in the spectral domain that depends on the peak intensity, pulse duration and propagation distance. To maximize spectral broadening by SPM, the pulse duration must be minimized, and the peak intensity maximized. However, in the presence of AD, the temporal profile can shape itself into a soliton pulse, where the temporal chirp contributions of SPM become balanced with that of dispersion. This has the effect of preventing further spectral broadening, even though this pulse is at a minimal duration (i.e., transform limited). Note further that with respect to an optical pulse in an AD waveguide—if no soliton is generated as a result of insufficient pulse energy—the pulse will first compress and then stretch with a reversed temporal chirp, resulting in spectral clamping as with the normal dispersion case.
Advantageously, with our approach according to aspects of the present disclosure, we prevent the occurrence of such “spectro-temporal stagnation” repeatedly, by alternating between ND and AD waveguide segments along the propagation. Of further advantage, supercontinuum generation according to aspects of the present disclosure may be performed at lower powers—and in particular—lower than necessary for soliton generation. Accordingly, and as will be readily appreciated by those skilled in the art, supercontinuum generation systems, methods, and structures according to the present disclosure operate in regimes that cannot be used in conventional supercontinuum generation setups as taught and disclosed in the art.
Operationally, in sections of AD we perform temporal compression to increase (maximize) the peak intensity, and to decrease (minimize) pulse duration such that SPM spectral broadening is always optimized for the segment and/or the subsequent ND segment. However, before a soliton can form, we reverse the dispersion with a ND segment, such that coherent SPM spectral broadening remains ongoing, without termination through soliton formation or a broadened temporal profile.
Depending on the specific optical materials and geometries employed, spectral broadening through SPM will occur predominantly in ND segments, in AD segments, or in both—depending upon particular configuration. For a basic illustration of the concept, we proceed only with the first case where the AD segments merely serve to temporally compress the optical pulse to, ideally, the transform limit with only negligible nonlinear contributions. SPM spectral broadening is maximized and carried out only in the ND segments. We label such a structure as an ND SCG chain. Of course, such illustrating is in now way limiting as any of the above-identified cases/scenarios are contemplated and included in the scope of the present disclosure.
Another reason for choosing this case as an illustrative example is that it exhibits a spectral coherence advantage over the other case (with strong SPM occurring in the AD segments). The reason is that modulation instabilities (MI) are absent in ND SCG, which inhibits the growth of noise via MI.
Continuing with our illustrative discussion, we assume for specificity that a transform limited Gaussian pulse serves as input into a first ND segment as such a pulse is at its minimum duration, which maximizes SPM spectral broadening. As spectral broadening occurs, the pulse accelerates its rate of temporal defocusing. This eventually results in a temporally stretched pulse having a much longer duration and lower peak intensity that inhibits SPM. At this point in its propagation through the segmented waveguide, the pulse enters an AD segment where the pulse becomes temporally re-focused to ideally its transform limit.
Temporally, the pulse can now maximize SPM and broadening in the next ND segment relative to the case where it is temporally broadened. Thus, once the point of strongest temporal focusing is reached in the AD segment, the cycle is repeated with a next ND segment for SPM spectral broadening, then a next AD segment for temporal re-focusing and so on. Accordingly, spectral broadening can be increased in steps—towards a desired bandwidth—while circumventing spectral clamping through loss of peak intensity and increased pulse duration. The dynamics of the other case (where SPM is non-negligible in the AD sections) is highly similar and according details are presented later.
Quantification of the ND SCG Case
In order to quantify the conditions that the lengths of the segments fulfill for inducing the described dynamics in a ND SCG chain, we recall the basic relations describing nonlinearity and group velocity dispersion. Ideally, for large SPM spectral broadening in the ND segments, the nonlinear length, Lnl(ND), has to be smaller than the dispersion length, LD(ND), with
Here, to is the transform limited pulse duration (e−1 intensity) at the input of the ND (or AD) segment, Po the input peak power, γ, is the waveguide nonlinear coefficient, and β2(ND) is group velocity dispersion in the ND segment. For the AD segments, γ(AD)→0, minimizing bandwidth increase in the AD segments.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that it can be seen from the above relations that the dispersion length decreases quadratically with decreasing transform limited pulse duration (i.e., with increasing spectral width) but the nonlinear length decreases linearly. Thus, in the limit of many ND segments, when the spectrum has substantially broadened, Ll(ND) will become greater or equal than LD(ND)—always. However, it will be shown both numerically and with our experimental results that substantial spectral broadening still transpires when Lnl(ND) becomes larger or equal to LD(ND).
Note that while these lengths work for the idealized case of a Gaussian input pulse with only up to second order dispersion, these length relations are paramount in deriving relevant expressions needed to optimize the SCG process in segmented waveguide chains with alternating dispersion according to aspects of the present disclosure.
For example, the minimal spectral bandwidth increase obtained in each ND segment of a ND SCG chain can be derived using the above shown characteristic length relations and it can be shown to be increasing exponentially. This result is important—not only does this SCG method according to aspects of the present disclosure bypass spectral clamping in dispersive media, the spectral bandwidth increases exponentially, meaning that the chain need not be composed of many segments for a large spectral enhancement and in general, shows that the chain is a powerful solution to generate SCG relative to conventional methods.
To further elaborate on the above, we note that the spectral bandwidth enclosed between the e−1 spectral intensity values (Δω), increases in each ND segment by at least a factor of √{square root over (2)}, relative to the previous ND segment in the chain. For example, ΔωN>√{square root over (2)}Δω0, where N is the ND segment number further provided
and the ND segment length (LND) satisfies LND≥2Lnl(ND). This bandwidth increase is shown graphically in
In general, as long as Lnl(ND)≥LD(ND) our calculated lower bound of the spectral bandwidth ratio in each ND segment varies from 2.8, when Lnl(ND)→0 to 1.1 when Lnl(ND)=0.8LD(ND) (provided LND≥2Lnl(ND)).
In fact, it outperforms spectral generation in the ideal but physically unattainable case without dispersion where the bandwidth growth converges to a linear increase with propagation, with a sufficient number of ND segments. The more physically relevant uniform dispersion case saturates to a constant bandwidth past a certain LND length (this length is labelled as Lsat(ND)), so methods according to the present disclosure will always substantially outperform this case. In fact, if the ND segment length is chosen to be equal or greater than Lsat(ND), our method according to the present disclosure outperforms the uniform dispersion case within the first ND segment.
We note that the power of this lower bound estimate is not only to show the spectral bandwidth increases greater than an exponential function within a certain domain of interest but it can be used as a tool in the design of these chains to obtain the nonlinear lengths needed to guarantee a certain bandwidth increase dynamic (and thus, a certain end bandwidth). However, the estimate itself is strict and for Lnl(ND)>0.8LD(ND) it is lower than one (e.g., shown in
To make the above more precise,
Description of AD SCG and Mixed Case
Another important case is when the main contribution to spectral broadening through self-phase modulation occurs in the anomalous dispersive segments in the chain (i.e., an AD SCG chain). In such a situation, nonlinear temporal compression takes place in the AD segments, and due to the rising peak intensity and reduced duration, SPM expands the spectral bandwidth. However, past a certain propagation length in the AD segment either the pulse moves past its temporal focus, inverting the direction of its temporal chirp and leading to SPM spectral narrowing or soliton formation takes place and ceases any substantial coherent spectral bandwidth increase (i.e., clamps the spectrum). Thus, the length of each AD segment is chosen such that before these two processes take place the pulse enters an ND segment where it is temporally defocused and chirped. After the ND segment, in the subsequent AD segment, the pulse is not at its temporal focus nor is it close to the short duration, high peak intensity profile needed to couple into solitons. Consequently, spectral generation takes place as the pulse is temporally compressing from its dispersed chirped profile. Again, before it compresses to the point where soliton fission or temporal chirp inversion takes place, the AD segment is terminated. In this manner, spectral generation can continue in an unclamped fashion in the chain just by the addition of AD-ND cycles.
Since, the material dispersion increases SPM spectral broadening in the AD SCG process before spectral clamping occurs, AD SCG has a higher spectral bandwidth than ND SCG, where material dispersion always works to counter SPM spectral broadening. Thus, the AD SCG chain variant may require less chain cycles to generate a desired spectral bandwidth relative to the ND SCG chain counter-part. As well, this method generates SCG even when the input pulse energy is below the fundamental soliton energy which is needed to initiate SCG in conventional setups. Therefore, as in the ND SCG chain variant of the method, the AD SCG chain not only overcomes AD spectral clamping processes but renders SCG accessible to low pulse energy regimes that are below the cut off needed for SCG in conventional AD SCG waveguides.
Note that the last case is that spectral generation is substantially done in all segments and they (ND or AD segment) mutually prevent each other's spectral clamping mechanisms (i.e., AD and ND SCG spectral clamping mechanisms).
Experimental Setup and Results
To demonstrate systems, methods, and structures for SCG experimentally, a fiber-based wave guiding was chosen to realize a ND SCG chain, because fibers enable easy control of the length of the segments to optimize the SCG. Additionally, the fibers can be joined relatively easily using a commercial splicer and cleaver. Accordingly, fibers were chosen such that the ND SCG chain case could be quickly and conveniently demonstrated experimentally.
Experimental Setup: The illustrative experimental setup, shown schematically in
Operationally—and for the purposes of our experimental purposes and in no way limiting the scope of our disclosure—pulse parameters of a pulse entering the fiber chain are a 74 fs FWHM pulse duration, 50 mW average power at a 79.9 MHz repetition rate, at a central wavelength of 1560 nm. The power coupled into the fiber was 35.6 mW (446 pJ pulse energy).
Segments of standard single-mode doped-silica step-index optical fiber (Corning Hi1060flex for ND, Corning SMF28 for AD) were used. This has the benefit of providing well-characterized dispersion properties, see
As may be observed,
For the first ND segment, we obtain Lnl(ND)≈4.1 cm and LD(ND)≈10.1 cm, satisfying
However, it is not guaranteed that this inequality is maintained for all subsequent ND segments since LD(ND) reduces faster with decreasing pulse duration. In fact, in our experiment, Lnl(ND)>LD(ND) past the 3rd ND segment, however, it is shown in the results that spectral bandwidth increase still takes place.
Experimental Procedure: The experiment was performed by starting with a 25 cm piece of the ND fiber, and measuring the spectrum from its output using an OSA. The length was shortened (cut) until a slight reduction of the spectral width became noticeable (e.g., at the −30 dB level). This ensures that the fiber length is within the length where the spectral generation is ongoing and not clamped. Past this length, the spectral generation clamps (i.e., it is negligible with magnitudes less than −30 dB), as discussed above due to the dispersive temporal defocusing.
Shortening the fiber to this length disrupts further pulse defocusing thus minimizing phase contributions from higher order dispersion, however, without disrupting the spectral generation. It is important to remove such phase contributions to achieve better pulse compression in the following AD segment because, in our demonstration, the AD fiber cannot completely compensate for the high order dispersion of the ND fiber and thus cannot compensate for this.
Next, a 20 cm piece of AD fiber is spliced to the ND fiber and the pulse duration is measured with an intensity auto correlator (APE Pulse Check). The fiber shortened until the autocorrelation trace (AC) indicates a minimum pulse duration, i.e., that the temporal focus lies at the output facet. The procedure is then repeated with the next piece of ND fiber and so forth.
Results and Discussion
Spectral and Temporal Evolution of ND SCG Fiber Chain: The experimental results are shown in
As may be observed and understood by those skilled in the art, a significant increase of the spectral bandwidth is realized—as compared to fibers with equal length of non-segmented ND and AD fiber. Also, shown is the result of theoretical modelling based on numerically solving the generalized nonlinear Schrodinger equation. The theoretical prediction supports the experimental data, namely, that there is a large bandwidth enhancement for the ND SCG alternating chain.
At this point those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that supercontinuum generation according to aspects of the present disclosure resulting from alternating dispersion as now taught and disclosed is realizable, practical, and surprisingly effective.
These results provide, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of this novel method of SCG: From the substantial relative bandwidth increase of the spectrum obtained with the chain versus the clamped spectrum of the ND fiber of the same length, this chain fiber system advantageously circumvents the spectral clamping that occurs in ND fiber SCG through loss of peak intensity.
For example, the e−1 spectral width of 233 nm for the chain is a factor 1.7 wider than with the ND fiber and a factor of 2.7 than with the AD fiber. This spectral enhancement was obtained with an additional loss of 49% within the fiber chain over the reference fibers, thus making this significant enhancement even more substantial since it is effectively obtained at half the available power.
The experiment also demonstrated that the spectral bandwidth growth can take place for Lnl(ND)>LD(ND) even at early segments in the ND SCG chain (i.e., at the 3rd ND segment in the fiber chain).
Moreover, of considerable importance is that the experiment demonstrated that—provided they have opposite sign—the alternating ND-AD dispersion parameter profiles need not be strict to a specific arrangement with respect to higher order dispersion parameters (i.e., greater than second order). Rather, the chain is robust to deviations in the dispersion parameter shapes. This is elaborated more in the next paragraph and the next section.
With simultaneous reference to those figures, it may be understood that
It was also experimentally verified that the last AD segment was able to compress the pulses to an auto correlated value of 46 fs (˜33 fs) FWHM which is a substantial additional advantage to the alternating chain SCG and of potential use to practical SCG experiments; at the output of the chain, if terminated by an AD segment, the SCG pulse is already in a temporally compressed form. To our knowledge, we have not found an all fiber SCG system that compresses the output pulse to sub 50 fs durations at this central wavelength with these fibers exhibiting unmatched in magnitude higher than second order dispersion coefficients (i.e., unmatched higher order dispersion).
We note that the last (fourth) ND segment provided a e−1 spectral bandwidth ratio of 1.28 relative to the previous segment. This exceeds expectations given that Lnl(ND)>>LD(ND). However, at this ND segment number the spectral increase starts to slow. Ultimately, the spectral increase in subsequent segments in this fiber chain rendition are limited due to the loss of peak intensity from uncompensated spectral phase and cumulative splice losses.
In a practical implementation of the ND SCG chain, the dispersion parameter profiles of the two segments do not have opposite signs across the entire spectral range of relevance. Past a certain bandwidth, uncompensated spectral phase arises because the dispersion parameter, D of the ND fiber and AD fiber has the same sign. This ultimately creates an increasing temporal separation for radiation in this spectral region (temporal walk-off), a continuous temporal broadening of this radiation and a lowering of the overall temporal peak intensity. This limits not only spectral generation in this region but the overall spectral generation.
We note that this is a technical limitation in our experiment. Specifically, because of this, it is expected that the spectral generation should be clamped, near the two zero dispersion wavelengths (ZDWs) of the AD and ND segments at 1.31 μm and 1.83 μm (shown in
As well, within the spectral range where the signs of D are opposite between the ND-AD segments, spectral phase build up still occurs. This is because the AD fiber segments introduce higher than second order dispersion (the ND segments higher order dispersion contributions are less substantial, as discussed in the next section). This results in an uncompensated spectral phase after each ND-AD segment cycle that builds up within the range between the ZDWs. This also results in the lowering of the peak intensity and temporal walk off into sub-pulses (centered at different central wavelengths). However, this occurs after many chain segments, being a higher order dispersion effect, and it may be that the chain is rather resilient to this process (see next section). Evidence of these processes are highlighted in
The impact of Higher Order Dispersion and Ideal Dispersion Parameters: The impact of higher order (i.e., higher than second order) spectral phase contributions due to SPM contributes less to its overall spectral phase contribution. The second order phase contribution of SPM dominates since higher order contributions mainly arise from the spectral contributions of the wings of the temporal pulse, where the SPM chirp decreases back to the original carrier frequency of the pulse (here we assume close to Gaussian pulses). As such, these contributions can be treated as negligible due to the low amount of energy captured in the wings of the pulse relative to the main portion (within the e−1 temporal width).
As will be readily appreciated by those skilled in the art—and of particular advantage for systems, methods, and structures according to aspects of the present disclosure—the AD segments need only compensate for this second order phase contribution (which is chirped in the same direction as the ND dispersion phase function and opposite to the AD dispersion phase function). This can easily be accounted for by adjusting the length of the AD section thereby matching the magnitude of its group delay dispersion (GDD) coefficient.
We note that the higher order dispersion of the ND segment can be effectively ignored in ND segments where large SPM spectral broadening occurs, since the dispersive phase contribution is continuously stretched over the increasing spectral bandwidth. If the ND segment length is discontinued (too short) before spectral clamping in that segment occurs, the dispersive phase contributions are effectively divided over a larger bandwidth. This would have the effect that the GDD introduced by the ND segment is lower and its higher order phase contributions even lower. Thus, in the beginning chain cycles, the spectral generation is robust to the higher order dispersion of the ND segment (all that counts is that the second order dispersion coefficient between the two segments has opposing signs for pulse compression). Therefore, since the dominant higher order phase contributions are from the higher order dispersion of the AD segment, a group velocity dispersion (GVD) parameter profile that has minimum higher order dispersion is ideal (i.e., flat).
When spectral generation in later ND chain segments becomes less dominant (i.e.,Lnl(ND)>LD(ND) or when the length of the ND segments are larger than the spectral saturation length, it is then ideal to have mirror reflected dispersion parameter (or GVD) profiles about the spectral-axis between the AD and ND fiber segments (determined to an arbitrary constant that can be set by the length of the AD segment).
We note however—in the experiment—the dispersion parameter profiles of the AD and ND fiber segments are neither spectral-axis mirror reflected profiles of each other nor does the AD dispersion parameter profile correspond to a flat GVD along the spectral range of interest (in fact, it deviates considerably from this). Yet it was experimentally observed that the alternating chain had a significant spectral enhancement relative to the reference fibers. As well, a pulse duration of 33 fs was experimentally verified at the last AD segment of our fiber chain. This temporal compression is unprecedented with such fiber segments in general and thus verifies convincingly that the chain is robust to the specific dispersion parameter shapes (provided the signs alternate).
This may be explained by the fact that while the profiles are far from ideal, the opposing dispersion parameter signs (and that the segment lengths vary along the chain) render that some SPM generated spectral components can “orbit” around the nonlinearly interacting main pulse (or sub-pulses) and at positions along the propagation coordinate overlap again with the main radiation (perhaps after a set amount chain cycles later in the chain). Thus, they may then still contribute to spectral generation, through XPM with the main pulse, resulting in spectral bandwidth generation, and/or that these spectral components shift their frequencies to places along the dispersion curve where the spectral phase is better compensated between the alternating segments. This orbital dynamic of these spectral components results in the peak intensity being maintained for a larger amount of chain segments and less affected by uncompensated spectral phase along the propagation coordinate and an ongoing spectral generation. This results in the chain being rather robust to the specific shape of the component segment dispersion parameter profiles and just strict to the fact the dispersion signs alternate between these segments.
Of particular importance from the results of the experiment is that the method is robust to these higher than second order phase processes as can be seen by the large spectral enhancement and the temporal pulse compression achieved, but nevertheless these processes, especially the higher order dispersion of the AD segments, can influence the spectral generation (for example the dynamics of the bandwidth increase ratio) after many chain cycles.
Conclusions
We have now disclosed and presented a novel approach towards wave guided supercontinuum generation which overcomes fundamental limitations of current methods. Via alternating the waveguide dispersion between normal dispersive and anomalous in segments of suitable length along the propagation direction spectral clamping in SCG can be overcome, while maintaining coherent generation. As well, SCG can be extended to low peak powers, arbitrarily lower than what is conventional using this approach.
We have explored and discussed in detail the case where SCG occurs predominantly in the normally dispersive segments both theoretically and experimentally. We found that under ideal conditions, even in the presence of typical waveguide (fiber) dispersion the spectral bandwidth enhancement can exceed the case where there is no dispersion. We also derived lower bound estimates that can aid in the design of such alternating waveguides. We demonstrate the novel approach experimentally using segments of standard normal dispersion and anomalous dispersion fiber spliced in a chain. We generated a SC spectrum with substantially higher bandwidth than with the equivalent length of fiber using only normal dispersion or anomalous dispersion. We also found that the fiber chain is rather robust to higher than second order dispersion of the segments and a high spectral enhancement and pulse compression can still be achieved.
We note that our calculations and/or experiments that we have performed indicate that AD segment length converges to a fixed length with increasing chain cycles. Since the ND segment length can be configured to be constant this means that for alternating segment chain cycles sufficiently large, the segment lengths would approach a periodic arrangement. As will be understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art, this makes systems, methods, and structures according to the present disclosure compatible with repeated nonlinear generation as in a resonator. For example—and in no way limiting—one could configure a system in which an end of the alternating segment chain is looped back to a portion of the chain at which periodic convergence of segment lengths begin. Alternatively, if one accepts the reduced spectral generation per chain segment that would be present in a beginning portion of the chain with a periodic structure, one could use the entire chain as an alternating dispersion resonator for controlling Kerr-comb generation in integrated optical resonators.
Finally, we note once more that systems, methods, and structures according to aspects of the present disclosure may advantageously take advantage or or otherwise employ silicon photonics technologies, methodologies, and/or materials and be included into integrated systems, and structures.
At this point, while we have presented this disclosure using some specific examples, those skilled in the art will recognize that our teachings are not so limited. Accordingly, this disclosure should be only limited by the scope of the claims attached hereto.
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