| Literature DB >> 29549353 |
Lizhen Wang1, Peizhen Xu1, Yuhang Li2, Jize Han3, Xin Guo1, Yudong Cui1, Xueming Liu1, Limin Tong4.
Abstract
Mode-locked Yb-doped fiber lasers around 1 μm are attractive for high power applications and low noise pulse train generation. Mode-locked fiber lasers working in soliton and stretched-pulse regime outperform others in terms of the laser noise characteristics, mechanical stability and easy maintenance. However, conventional optical fibers always show a normal group velocity dispersion around 1 μm, leading to the inconvenience for necessary dispersion management. Here we show that optical microfibers having a large anomalous dispersion around 1 μm can be integrated into mode-locked Yb-doped fiber lasers with ultralow insertion loss down to -0.06 dB, enabling convenient dispersion management of the laser cavity. Besides, optical microfibers could also be adopted to spectrally broaden and to dechirp the ultrashort pulses outside the laser cavity, giving rise to a pulse duration of about 110 fs. We believe that this demonstration may facilitate all-fiber format high-performance ultrashort pulse generation at 1 μm and may find applications in precision measurements, large-scale facility synchronization and evanescent-field-based optical sensing.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29549353 PMCID: PMC5856737 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-23027-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Calculated β2 for optical microfibers with a diameter of 1.0, 1.2, 1.5, and 2.0 μm, respectively. (b) The measured (red line) and the calculated (blue line) β for an optical microfiber with a diameter of 1.0 μm, which was chosen in accordance with the one used in the experiment shown in Fig. 2. The inset shows the measured relative phase delay, from which we obtained the β. (c) The measured insertion loss of the optical microfiber in (b). The inset shows the transmission spectra of fibers spliced with and without optical microfibers, and the difference of the two curves is the insertion loss. The red dashed line gives the average loss, i.e., −0.06 dB. The points above the zero-loss line are attributed to the spectral fluctuations of the broadband source we used.
Figure 2(a) Schematic for an ultrafast fiber laser incorporating an optical microfiber for dispersion management. The pump at 976 nm entered the laser cavity via a 980/1060 nm WDM/Isolator hybrid and pumped a 15 cm-long Yb doped fiber (Yb1200, Liekki). The waveplates and the PBS between the two collimators worked as an artificial fast saturable absorber for the mode-locked laser operation via nonlinear polarization evolution. A sealed optical microfiber was spliced with negligible optical losses for cavity dispersion management. The zoomed-in figure shows the details of the sealed optical microfiber. (b) Typical output optical spectrum at a pump power of about 150 mW for the laser cavity incorporated with a 25 cm long optical microfiber with a diameter of about 1 μm. Also showed the dashed blue line standing for the laser without the optical microfiber, for a comparison. (c) The waveform from a 1 GHz photodetector displayed on a 6 GHz-bandwidth oscilloscope. The Fourier-transform spectrum shows as the inset, with a fundamental frequency of 120 MHz, corresponding to a cavity length of 1.7 m.
Figure 3(a) Schematic for an ultrafast fiber laser with a dechirping microfiber and SMF at the output pigtail. (b) The output optical spectra for lasers with (red solid) and without (blue dashed) the dechirping optical microfiber. The pump power was about 150 mW, and the output power was measured to be 60 mW. (c) The interferometric autocorrelations for lasers with (red) and without (blue) the dechirping optical microfiber. The dechirping optical microfiber had identical parameters with the one inside the cavity shown in Fig. 2(a), and the dechirping SMF was a piece of about 30 cm long HI1060 (Corning).