11 research outputs found
All Polarization-maintaining Er-doped Fiber Laser Modelocked by a Graphene Saturable Absorber Employing an Intra-cavity Compressor for Dispersion Management
The performance of a stable dispersion tunable Erbium doped fiber laser modelocked by multi-layer graphene is presented and discussed. The cavity is based on all PM fibers and a free-space Martinez compressor.QC 20180110</p
All Polarization-maintaining Er-doped Fiber Laser Modelocked by a Graphene Saturable Absorber Employing an Intra-cavity Compressor for Dispersion Management
The performance of a stable dispersion tunable Erbium doped fiber laser modelocked by multi-layer graphene is presented and discussed. The cavity is based on all PM fibers and a free-space Martinez compressor.QC 20180110</p
Visualization 1: Fully-integrated dual-wavelength all-fiber source for mode-locked square-shaped mid-IR pulse generation via DFG in PPLN
Self-starting of the laser Originally published in Optics Express on 14 December 2015 (oe-23-25-32080
Compact mode-locked Er-doped fiber laser for broadband cavity-enhanced spectroscopy
We report the design and characteristics of a simple and compact mode-locked Er-doped fiber laser and its application to broadband cavity-enhanced spectroscopy. The graphene mode-locked polarization maintaining oscillator consumes less than 5 W of power. It is thermally stabilized, enclosed in a 3D printed box, and equipped with three actuators that control the repetition rate: fast and slow fiber stretchers, and metal-coated fiber section. This allows wide tuning of the repetition rate and its stabilization to an external reference source. The applicability of the laser to molecular spectroscopy is demonstrated by detecting CO(2)in air using continuous-filtering Vernier spectroscopy with absorption sensitivity of 5.5 x 10(-8)cm(-1)in 50 ms
Thulium-Doped Silica Fibers with Enhanced Fluorescence Lifetime and Their Application in Ultrafast Fiber Lasers
In this work we report on the thulium-doped silica-based optical fibers with increased fluorescence lifetime of the 3F4 level thanks to the modification of the local environment of thulium ions by high content of alumina. The determination of the cross-relaxation energy-transfer coefficients from the measurements of the fluorescence lifetimes of the 3F4 and 3H4 energy levels of Tm3+ ions in the experimentally prepared optical fiber is provided as well. Preforms of optical fibers were prepared either by conventional solution-doping of Tm3+ and Al3+ ions or by dispersion-doping of Tm3+ ions with alumina nanoparticles. Optical fibers were characterized by means of Tm, Al, and Ge concentrations, refractive index profiles, optical spectral absorption and luminescence, and by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Highly aluminium-codoped thulium silicate optical fibers exhibited fluorescence lifetimes of over ~500 μs with maximum value of 756 μs, which means a fluorescence lifetime enhancement when compared to the thulium-doped fibers reported elsewhere. We show an application of the thulium-doped fiber in a compact all-fiber ring laser that is passively mode-locked by using graphene-based saturable absorber. The output pulsewidth and repetition rate were 905 fs and 32.67 MHz, respectively
Dual-Wavelength Pumped Highly Birefringent Microstructured Silica Fiber for Widely Tunable Soliton Self-Frequency Shift
We report the design of a microstructured silica-based fiber for widely
tunable soliton self-frequency shift, suitable for pumping with two most common
fiber laser wavelengths: 1.04 {\mu}m and 1.55 {\mu}m. Depending on the pump
source, the output spectrum can be continuously tuned up to 1.67 {\mu}m (pump
at 1.04 {\mu}m) or 1.95 {\mu}m (pump at 1.55 {\mu}m) in the same 1.5 m-long
fiber sample, with pump-to-soliton conversion efficiency higher than 20%. The
fiber is highly birefringent, which results in an excellent polarization
extinction ratio of the soliton, reaching 26 dB. The shifted solitons have a
high degree of coherence confirmed by pulse-to-pulse interference measurement.
The available soliton tuning range covers the wavelengths inaccessible for
fiber lasers, e.g., 1.3 {\mu}m and 1.7 {\mu}m, highly important for
multi-photon microscopy and imaging. Our work shows that it is possible to
design and fabricate one universal optical fiber that supports soliton shift
when pumped at two different wavelengths separated by over 500 nm