| Literature DB >> 29463807 |
Mahmood Bagheri1, Clifford Frez2, Lukasz A Sterczewski2, Ivan Gruidin2, Mathieu Fradet2, Igor Vurgaftman3, Chadwick L Canedy3, William W Bewley3, Charles D Merritt3, Chul Soo Kim3, Mijin Kim4, Jerry R Meyer3.
Abstract
Since their inception, optical frequency combs have transformed a broad range of technical and scientific disciplines, spanning time keeping to navigation. Recently, dual comb spectroscopy has emerged as an attractive alternative to traditional Fourier transform spectroscopy, since it offers higher measurement sensitivity in a fraction of the time. Midwave infrared (mid-IR) frequency combs are especially promising as an effective means for probing the strong fundamental absorption lines of numerous chemical and biological agents. Mid-IR combs have been realized via frequency down-conversion of a near-IR comb, by optical pumping of a micro-resonator, and beyond 7 μm by four-wave mixing in a quantum cascade laser. In this work, we demonstrate an electrically-driven frequency comb source that spans more than 1 THz of bandwidth centered near 3.6 μm. This is achieved by passively mode-locking an interband cascade laser (ICL) with gain and saturable absorber sections monolithically integrated on the same chip. The new source will significantly enhance the capabilities of mid-IR multi-heterodyne frequency comb spectroscopy systems.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29463807 PMCID: PMC5820280 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21504-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Passively mode-locked laser. (a) Schematic of a laser cavity with gain and saturable absorber sections (top panel). The saturable absorber imposes pulsed operation by providing an intensity-dependent loss mechanism (middle panel). The generated pulses form an optical frequency comb with modes separated by the cavity’s free spectral range, FSR (bottom panel). (b) An ICL mode-locked laser consisting of gain (front) and saturable absorber (back) sections. (c) A typical ICL band diagram, 33 with the conduction band in blue, valence band in red, and wavefunctions for several key electron and hole states.
Figure 2Passively mode-locked interband cascade laser (ICL) (a) FTIR spectrum of the mode-locked ICL operating at I = 325 mA and T = 15 °C with the SA junction left open, showing >35 cm−1 (1.05 THz) bandwidth and >120 modes. (b) A breakout of the mode-locked spectrum measured by a high-resolution FTIR (100 MHz) under the same operating conditions as (a). (c) RF beat-note with 700 Hz linewidth. The inset shows the RF tone at 9.68 GHz on a much broader scale. (d) Intensity autocorrelation trace collected using two-photon absorption in an extended InGaAs detector (See Supp. Mat. 3). The presence of a dominant peak at delay times corresponding to multiples of the cavity round trip time, superimposed with the zero delay peak, confirms that the short pulses circulating in the optical cavity are mode-locked. (e) The trace shows that the mode-locked ICL emits pulses of width ≈750 fs.
Figure 3Heterodyne beat note experiment (a) FTIR spectra of two closely matched (Δf = 6.5 MHz) mode-locked ICLs operating at I = 304 mA and T = 15.4 °C (ICL #1), and I = 287 mA and T = 13.3 °C (ICL #2) spanning 30 cm−1. (b) Intermode beat notes (RF tones) measured electrically from the saturable absorber section. The inset shows a zoom-in view of the measured spectra with 2 KHz and 4 KHz linewidths for the blue and red spectra, respectively. (c) Phase-corrected (coherently averaged) multi-heterodyne spectrum extracted from a beating signal acquired over 100 μs. (d) Unprocessed time domain interferogram showing 4 periods of the optical beating. (e) Zoom into the central part of (d), showing a comparison of one period of the measured beating signal with a simulation assuming that all modes in (c) have equal phases (ΔΦ = 0). Its shape is determined mainly by the two strongest beat notes in the RF spectrum at 260–270 MHz in (c).