| Literature DB >> 30167253 |
Zhechao Wang1,2, Kasper Van Gasse1,2, Valentina Moskalenko3, Sylwester Latkowski3, Erwin Bente3, Bart Kuyken1,2, Gunther Roelkens1,2.
Abstract
Optical frequency combs emerge as a promising technology that enables highly sensitive, near-real-time spectroscopy with a high resolution. The currently available comb generators are mostly based on bulky and high-cost femtosecond lasers for dense comb generation (line spacing in the range of 100 MHz to 1 GHz). However, their integrated and low-cost counterparts, which are integrated semiconductor mode-locked lasers, are limited by their large comb spacing, small number of lines and broad optical linewidth. In this study, we report a demonstration of a III-V-on-Si comb laser that can function as a compact, low-cost frequency comb generator after frequency stabilization. The use of low-loss passive silicon waveguides enables the integration of a long laser cavity, which enables the laser to be locked in the passive mode at a record-low 1 GHz repetition rate. The 12-nm 10-dB output optical spectrum and the notably small optical mode spacing results in a dense optical comb that consists of over 1400 equally spaced optical lines. The sub-kHz 10-dB radio frequency linewidth and the narrow longitudinal mode linewidth (<400 kHz) indicate notably stable mode-locking. Such integrated dense comb lasers are very promising, for example, for high-resolution and real-time spectroscopy applications.Entities:
Keywords: mode-locked lasers; near-infrared spectroscopy; optical frequency comb; semiconductor lasers; silicon photonics
Year: 2017 PMID: 30167253 PMCID: PMC6062191 DOI: 10.1038/lsa.2016.260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Figure 1(a) Top and (b) side views of the anti-colliding MLL design. (c) Microscope image of the III-V-on-Si MLL. Insets: Scanning electron microscope images of various constituent parts of the laser.
Figure 2(a) Measured Current-Voltage (IV) curve and Light-Current (LI) curves for different SA bias. (b) Measured optical spectra as a function of the injected current in the gain sections, when the SA is biased at −2.6 V. (c) Mapping of 10-dB optical bandwidth as a function of the SOA injection current and SA bias. Different harmonic mode-locking regions are marked. The black dot indicates the optimal operation point for the 1-GHz laser operation. AM, amplitude modulation; ML, mode-locking.
Figure 3(a) RF spectrum of the generated pulse train (RBW 300 KHz, VBW 10 KHz) when the laser is operated at the optimal operation point of Figure 2c. Inset: enlarged RF spectrum in the frequency range of 1–10 MHz (b) Detail of the 1-GHz RF tone (RBW 10 Hz, VBW 10 kHz).
Figure 4(a) An optical comb generated by the passively locked 1 GHz MLL. Inset: a detail of evenly spaced optical modes in the comb. (b) Beat note between the optical comb and the tunable laser at a wavelength of 1600 nm. (c) Measured optical linewidth of the MLL using the delayed self-heterodyne method, which indicates an optical linewidth below 250 kHz. The black dots are the measured data, and the red curve is the corresponding Lorentzian fitting.
Figure 5(a) An auto-correlation trace and the corresponding fit of the MLL output. (b) The recorded pulse traces by a real-time oscilloscope for different parts of the optical comb. The inset shows a time trace of the pulse trains, which were recorded using a real-time oscilloscope. (c) Mapping of the auto-correlation trace width over the current injection and SA bias. The arrow indicates the optimal operation point.
Figure 6(a) High-resolution optical spectrum of the optical comb when the MLL is hybrid mode-locked (inset: magnification of the optical spectrum). (b) RF spectrum of the generated pulse train. (c) Fundamental RF peak over a span of 10 kHz. (d) An auto-correlation trace of the output pulse when the laser is hybrid mode-locked. (e) Beat note between the optical comb and the tunable laser at a wavelength of 1607 nm, which indicates that the linewidth of the optical mode is smaller than 1 MHz.
Comparison between the presented mode-locked laser and the state-of-the-art results in the literature
| [17] | Hybrid | 1.0385 GHz | <1 nm | 70 MHz | 500 kHz | 36 ps | <110 |
| [18] | Passive | 2.1 GHz | 1 nm | — | >1.3 MHz | 15.4 ps | 120 |
| [19] | Active | 0.927 GHz | 0.1 nm | — | — | 200 ps | 12 |
| Passive | 1.99 GHz | 1 nm | >14 kHz | 40 ps | 126 | ||
| [20] | Passive | 10.16 GHz | 8.7 nm | — | >15 kHz | 32.8 ps | 110 |
| [21] | Passive | 20 GHz | 15 nm | 900 MHz | 2.4 MHz | 3.8 ps | 90 |
| [22] | Passive | 2.5 GHz | 4 nm | — | 18.9 kHz | 15 ps | 210 |
| [23] | Passive | 16.6 GHz | — | 1 GHz | <2 kHz | — | — |
| This work | Passive | 1.009 GHz | 12 nm | <400 kHz | 0.9 kHz | 15 ps | 1400 |
| Hybrid | 1.009 GHz | 13 nm | <400 kHz | <1 Hz | 15 ps | 1500 |