| Literature DB >> 26514090 |
Diao Li1,2, Henri Jussila1, Lasse Karvonen1, Guojun Ye3,4, Harri Lipsanen1, Xianhui Chen3,4,5, Zhipei Sun1.
Abstract
Black phosphorus (BP) has recently been rediscovered as a new and interesting two-dimensional material due to its unique electronic and optical properties. Here, we study the linear and nonlinear optical properties of BP flakes. We observe that both the linear and nonlinear optical properties are anisotropic and can be tuned by the film thickness in BP, completely different from other typical two-dimensional layered materials (e.g., graphene and the most studied transition metal dichalcogenides). We then use the nonlinear optical properties of BP for ultrafast (pulse duration down to ~786 fs in mode-locking) and large-energy (pulse energy up to >18 nJ in Q-switching) pulse generation in fiber lasers at the near-infrared telecommunication band ~1.5 μm. We observe that the output of our BP based pulsed lasers is linearly polarized (with a degree-of-polarization ~98% in mode-locking, >99% in Q-switching, respectively) due to the anisotropic optical property of BP. Our results underscore the relatively large optical nonlinearity of BP with unique polarization and thickness dependence, and its potential for polarized optical pulse generation, paving the way to BP based nonlinear and ultrafast photonic applications (e.g., ultrafast all-optical polarization switches/modulators, frequency converters etc.).Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26514090 PMCID: PMC4626849 DOI: 10.1038/srep15899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) AFM image of transferred black phosphorus film on the fiber end. (b) Line profile along the dashed white line (marked in (a)). The thickness of BP film is ~25 nm at the fiber core (marked with a green circle in (a)). (c) Raman spectrum of a typical BP film.
Figure 2Linear and nonlinear optical properties of BP films:
Transmittance of BP films as a function of thickness at the wavelengths of 642 nm (a) and 520 nm (b). (c) Polarization dependent transmittance for 25 nm and 1100 nm thick BP films. The polarization directions corresponding to the maximum and minimum transmittance are linked with the zigzag and armchair axes of BP thin films. (d) Transmittance of BP films as a function of film thickness at the wavelength of 1550 nm with two orthogonal polarized light directions. (e) Fluence dependent transmittance of the 1100 nm thick BP film measured with ultrafast pulses at two orthogonal polarized light directions. (f) Relative transmittance change measured from 25 nm, 350 nm and 1100 nm thick BP films as a function of input pulse fluence. The input polarization direction is along the armchair direction of the BP films.
Figure 3BP Q-switched fiber laser results:
(a) Schematic of the laser setup. PC: polarization controller. LD: laser diode. WDM: wavelength division multiplexer. EDF: Erbium-doped fiber. ISO: isolator. The inset shows the transferred BP on the optical fiber end. The scale bar: 60 μm. The red point in the center indicates the ~10 μm-diameter optical fiber core, with the outside concentric grey circle of the 125-μm fiber cladding. The area marked by the pink dotted line specifies the transferred BP. (b) Output spectrum. (c) Pulse width and repetition rate as a function of pump power. (d) Pulse energy as a function of pump power. (e) Output pulse train. (f) Output polarization property.
Figure 4BP mode-locked fiber laser results: (a) Output spectrum. (b) Output autocorrelation trace, giving a pulse duration of ~786 fs. (c) Radio-frequency spectrum at the cavity fundamental repetition rate f0 (f0 = 14.7 MHz). The resolution bandwidth is 100 Hz. Inset: Output pulse train. (d) Output polarization property.