| Literature DB >> 28775327 |
James Keeley1, Joshua Freeman1, Karl Bertling2, Yah Leng Lim2, Reshma A Mohandas1, Thomas Taimre3, Lianhe H Li1, Dragan Indjin1, Aleksandar D Rakić2, Edmund H Linfield1, A Giles Davies1, Paul Dean4.
Abstract
The effects of optical feedback (OF) in lasers have been observed since the early days of laser development. While OF can result in undesirable and unpredictable operation in laser systems, it can also cause measurable perturbations to the operating parameters, which can be harnessed for metrological purposes. In this work we exploit this 'self-mixing' effect to infer the emission spectrum of a semiconductor laser using a laser-feedback interferometer, in which the terminal voltage of the laser is used to coherently sample the reinjected field. We demonstrate this approach using a terahertz frequency quantum cascade laser operating in both single- and multiple-longitudinal mode regimes, and are able to resolve spectral features not reliably resolved using traditional Fourier transform spectroscopy. We also investigate quantitatively the frequency perturbation of individual laser modes under OF, and find excellent agreement with predictions of the excess phase equation central to the theory of lasers under OF.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28775327 PMCID: PMC5543105 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-07432-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the experimental system showing laser-feedback interferometer (box A) and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer (box B), used for the purposes of spectral comparison. Wire grid polarisers (P) are employed to control the level of optical feedback in the laser-feedback interferometer. A quarter-wave plate (WP) and grid polariser provide optical isolation in the FTIR spectrometer. BS‒silicon beam splitter; DAQ‒digital acquisition board; A-Amplifier.
Figure 2Interferograms recorded via the laser terminal voltage VLFI with the laser operating on (a) single and (b) multiple longitudinal cavity modes. Voltage signals have been amplified by a 22 dB differential amplifier. (c) and (d) show the respective emission spectra obtained by performing a fast Fourier transform of the complete interferograms corresponding to data presented in (a) and (b).
Figure 3Normalised emission spectra obtained by laser-feedback interferometry (blue) and FTIR spectroscopy (red) for different dc driving currents, corresponding to both single- and multiple-mode operating regimes. The LFI spectra reveal lasing modes at 2.190 THz, 2.207 THz, 2.241 THz, 2.258 THz and 2.275 THz. In both cases the spectral resolution is 750 MHz.
Figure 4Frequency perturbation Δv of the laser cavity mode at ~2.241 THz under optical feedback, measured over a cavity extension in the laser-feedback interferometer ΔLext = 200 µm, for feedback parameters (a) C ≈ 1.5 and (b) C ≈ 0.5 (blue circles). Also shown are fits to the excess phase equation, Eq. (1) (red lines).
Figure 5Feedback parameter C (left axis) obtained from fitting the excess phase equation to measurements of the frequency perturbation Δv of the laser cavity mode at ~2.241 THz under optical feedback, for different levels of field attenuation in the external cavity. A linear fit to this data is shown (solid line). Also plotted (right axis) is the maximum amplitude of frequency perturbation C/2πτext determined from these fits.