Tunable visible comb using Raman self-frequency shift, intermodal phase matching and cascading of nonlinearities in an all-fiber platform
Up-conversion of IR frequency combs from compact erbium fiber mode-locked lasers (MLLs) around 1550 nm is enabling the development of small-footprint visible combs for ultralow-power spectroscopy and quantum optics. Limited tunability of the IR MLLs, due to the small gain bandwidth (∼30 nm) of erbiu...
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Published in | Physical review research Vol. 5; no. 2; p. L022020 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
American Physical Society
01.05.2023
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Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Up-conversion of IR frequency combs from compact erbium fiber mode-locked lasers (MLLs) around 1550 nm is enabling the development of small-footprint visible combs for ultralow-power spectroscopy and quantum optics. Limited tunability of the IR MLLs, due to the small gain bandwidth (∼30 nm) of erbium fiber amplifiers, and difficulty in achieving broadband phase matching for up-conversion in a nonlinear crystal or waveguide restricts the visible comb wavelengths to second- and third-harmonic wavelengths. Here, we harness the soliton self-frequency shift (SSFS) of sub-nJ energy mode-locked IR pulses in a standard single-mode silica fiber and combine it with the up-conversion, through cascading of optical nonlinearities, in a dispersion-engineered silica nanowire to achieve wideband tuning of the second-, third-, fourth-, and sixth-harmonic generated (SHG, THG, FHG, SiHG) signals. By varying the fiber length and the IR pump power, we Raman shift the pump wavelength from 1560 to ∼1750 nm using the SSFS and use it to tune the wavelengths of the THG and SHG signals in a 10-mm-long silica nanowire from 520 to 578 nm and 780 to ∼850 nm, respectively. Four-wave mixing between the THG and SHG signals creates a tunable signal close to the fourth-harmonic (390 nm), and SHG of THG creates a tunable SiHG in the deep UV (260 nm). The generation and tuning of deep UV (∼260 nm) to near-IR combs (∼780 nm) using redshifted IR solitons demonstrate that the cascading of optical nonlinearities in a silica nanowire enables spectral translation between wavelength regimes that are more than five octaves apart. |
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ISSN: | 2643-1564 2643-1564 |
DOI: | 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.5.L022020 |