Quantum-dot SOA boosts femtosecond pulses
by more than 21 dB
Researchers from the University of St. Andrews (Fife, Scotland)
and from the Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute (St. Petersburg,
Russia) reported amplification in excess of 21 dB for femtosecond
pulses in a quantum-dot semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA).
According to a postdeadline presentation at the recent Conference on
Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO; Long Beach, CA), the experiments
were made over a range of pump pulse energies from 0.01 to 3 pJ and
pump-signal wavelengths from 1160 to 1400 nm.
The pump consisted of a periodically poled, lithium niobate-based
optical parametric oscillator (OPO) operating at about 200 fs and 84
MHz that was coupled into the waveguide of the SOA through a
high-numerical-aperture lens. The active laser region in the
quantum-dot structure, grown on an n+ gallium arsenide (GaAs)
substrate by molecular-beam epitaxy, consisted of three planes of
self-organized quantum dots separated by GaAs spacers and was
located in the center of a 0.35-μm waveguide layer consisting of a
short-period aluminum gallium arsenide/gallium arsenide
superlattice. At a forward bias current of 155 mA, maximum pulse
amplification on the order of 21 dB was achieved near the 1250-nm
spontaneous-emission peak of the quantum-dot device, with a
bandwidth on the order of 100 nm (about 14 dB at 1175 nm and 16 dB
at 1275 nm). Contact Edik Rafailov at er8@st-andrews.ac.uk.
ZnS and ZnSe microchip lasers emit
continuous-wave infrared radiation
Producing another entry in the mid-infrared-laser category for
remote sensing, researchers at the University of Alabama
(Birmingham, AL) and Kuban State University (Krasnodar, Russia) have
developed erbium-fiber-laser-pumped microchip lasers based on
high-quality chromium-doped zinc sulfide (ZnS) and zinc selenide
(ZnSe) crystals, which are fabricated by chemical transport reaction
from the gas phase and doped by a diffusion method. The microchip
configuration permits compact and low-cost lasers.
Both types of crystals were formed into cavities with
millimeter-scale lengths, with versions constructed with either
hemispherical or parallel cavities. The lasers were pumped with a
2-W single-mode continuous-wave fiber laser emitting at 1550 nm. The
ZnS- and ZnSe-based microchip lasers emitted maximum optical output
powers of 63 and 100 mW at 2320 and 2520 nm, respectively, with
slope efficiencies of 53% and 20%. The temporal-mode structures of
the lasers showed many modes extending over a spectral region of
more than 50 nm, with approximately 100 modes for ZnSe and 50 for
ZnS. Coupled with an external etalon, the lasers emitted 25 to 35
modes. Contact Sergey Mirov at mirov@uab.edu.
Polymer microspheres make a photonic
wire
A new type of stable photonic-wire structure has been generated
by chemists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Oak Ridge, TN) that
may lead to applications in three-dimensional (3-D) conductive
vertical wires and supports, sensors, and microphotonics. The
polymer photonic wires consisted of an arbitrary number of
intersecting polymer-blend microparticles strung together. A
25-cm-long linear quadrupole driven at 400 Hz and 650 V was used as
a particle-focusing tool to manipulate the particles into 2- or 3-D
architectures such as the ones shown. For the 2-D structures, an x-y
translation stage underneath the quadrupole axis positioned
particles according to the direction of scattering.
The optical properties of the linked particle systems were
examined using an f-matched spectrograph coupled to the side port of
an inverted microscope. At specific points on the sphere chain, a
514.5-nm-emitting continuous-wave argon-ion laser with a spot
diameter of 1 μm caused fluorescence. Optical resonances occurred
near the intersection between spheres. Ray traces show coupled
resonant modes propagate at an angle near the half-angle of
intersection, suggesting that a variety of 2- and 3-D photonic-wire
structures can be tailored to specific applications. Contact Michael
D. Barnes at barnesmd1@ornl.gov.
Negative-differential-resistance device
responds to light
Perhaps hastening the day of practical high-speed silicon
(Si)-based monolithic optoelectronic integrated circuits, a group at
IBM Microelectronics (Essex Junction, VT) has developed a
light-controllable Si-based negative-differential-resistance (NDR)
device that works at room temperature. Light detectors that exhibit
NDR are fast and have intrinsic binary on-off characteristics. Such
devices could be combined with Si-based light sources in development
to integrate all active functions on one chip, or to sense external
light sources.
Made in a deep-trench, nitride oxide,
metal-insulator-semiconductor three-terminal configuration, the
device was fabricated by a standard metal-oxide-semiconductor
process and characterized under tungsten-lamp illumination. The NDR
peak was repeatable, stable, and tunable by varying the well bias.
Although the detector has characteristics of a high-speed device, no
attempts were made to optimize this first prototype for high speed.
Other potential uses for the device are in photosensing, optical
analog-to-digital converters, optical frequency multipliers, laser
radar and ranging, quantum devices, and parity generators for error
detection in optical communication. Contact Fen Chen at
chenfe@us.ibm.com.
Deep-ultraviolet coherent light shines
from KBBF crystal
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (Beijing, China) reported
obtaining coherent 179.4-nm emission from the fourth-harmonic
generation of a nanosecond Ti:sapphire laser system. The system,
which had an output of 717.4 nm and a repetition rate of 1 kHz,
consisted of a Ti:sapphire oscillator pumped by a Nd:YLF laser and a
Ti:sapphire amplifier pumped by a Nd:YLF laser. The light was
directed through a 5-mm-thick, type I phase-matched lithium boron
oxide (LBO) crystal, converting 10% of the fundamental wavelength
into second-harmonic generation (SHG) at 358.7 nm. The remaining
400-mW light was focused into a 10 x 1.2-mm platelike crystal of
potassium diberyllium boron trioxide fluoride
(KBe2BO3F2 or KBBF) using 60°
prisms. One interface of the KBBF crystal was filled with silicone
oil, and the other was filled with Fomblin (perfluoropolyether). The
fundamental (717.4-nm), SHG (358.7-nm), and fourth-harmonic
(179.4-nm) wavelengths had corresponding pulse durations of 21, 15,
and 13 ns. Output power of 8 to 2 mW was obtained in the wavelength
region of 200 to 186.3 nm, showing promise for detailed inspection
of optics, photolithography, and laser micromachining. ontact
Chuangtian Chen at cct@cl.cryo.ac.cn.
Microstructured fiber shows tunable
birefringence
Researchers at OFS Fitel Laboratories (Somerset, NJ) have
demonstrated tunable birefringence in a microstructured silica fiber
with some of its air holes filled with a polymer. The geometry—six
holes equally spaced around a central solid core—is not normally
birefringent, but when, for example, two opposing air holes are
filled with an acrylate-based polymer with a refractive index that
varies with temperature (dN/dT of -4 x 10-4/°C),
temperature-tunable birefringence appears (nx -
ny is on the order of 10-3) at a tapered
section of the fiber. Varying the temperature over a 140°C range
changes the birefringence over a range of approximately 4.4 x
10-4.
To fill the air holes with polymer, the researchers immerse one
end of the fiber in a fluid monomer blend, sealing specific air
holes, and apply a vacuum to the other end of the fiber. The monomer
is then cured with ultraviolet radiation to form a polymer. A
capillary heater provides fast 1-s-scale temperature tuning,
producing a relative phase shift of 6π over the fiber length and a
tuning coefficient of 15 rad/m°C. Contact Benjamin Eggleton at
egg@ofsoptics.com.
Timing-jitter compensator opens eye
closure
Researchers at Lucent Technologies (Holmdel, NJ) have
demonstrated a time-lens timing-jitter compensator to improve
bit-error rates in ultralong-haul dense
wavelength-division-multiplexing (DWDM) soliton transmissions. The
device, described in a postdeadline presentation at the annual
Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO; Long Beach, CA) in
May, consisted of two lithium niobate phase modulators rendered
polarizationindependent by a polarization-diversity scheme and
followed by a linear dispersive element (1 km of
dispersion-compensating fiber).
Using the phase-modulator stage to frequency-shift input pulses
in proportion to jitter placement and the dispersive element to
translate each pulse on to the mean arrival time, the device
successfully removed eye closure and reduced the timing-jitter
penalty in a DWDM, all-Raman-amplified, dispersion-managed soliton
system consisting of about 100 10-Gbit/s wavelength channels with
50-GHz spacing. Error-free distances of 5500 km were improved to
about 7500 km using the timing-jitter compensator for an improvement
in Q factors, based on the measured bit-error rate, of about 2.1 dB
at 7200 km. According to the researchers, the design of their device
is also independent of transmission distance. Contact Chris Xu at
chrisxu@lucent.com.
Active-matrix flat-panel displays are normally fabricated on
glass, a relatively inert substance amenable to semiconductor
processing. But glass displays are fragile—a problem for portable
devices such as cell phones, which get dropped all too often.
Ongoing research aims to replace glass with something more durable:
for example, plastic combined with organic transistors. Such
displays, however, may be years away from fruition. Avoiding the
esoteric-materials problem, engineers at E Ink (Cambridge, MA) have
developed an active-matrix display consisting of E Ink's
electrophoretic-ink technology on a steel-foil substrate, for a
total display thickness of only 0.3 mm. Steel foil is inexpensive,
durable, and allows for standard semiconductor processing
techniques.
One display prototype, targeted for handheld devices, has a
96-pixel-per-in. resolution, a 3-in. diagonal, and a size of 240 x
160 pixels. Another display with a 1.6-in. diagonal can be
integrated into so-called "smart cards"—a feat impossible for
ordinary active-matrix displays. The bendability of the foil-based
displays will enable designers to incorporate curved display
surfaces into portable devices. The displays are expected to reach
consumers in 2004 to 2005. See www.eink.com.
Photonic-crystal fiber guides terahertz
pulses
The field of terahertz imaging is inhibited by the lack of
low-loss waveguides for convenient delivery of terahertz radiation.
Now, a group at the Pohang University of Science and Technology
(Pohang, Korea) has created plastic photonic-crystal fibers that
guide terahertz pulses in single-mode fashion over the 0.1- to 3-THz
frequency range. The fibers are fabricated from 500-μm-diameter
high-density polyethylene (HDPE) tubes formed into a hexagonal
lattice with a single solid HDPE rod at its center to form a
high-refractive-index lattice defect. With a tube-wall thickness of
50 μm, the lattice has an air-fill factor of 0.673.
Terahertz pulses of approximately 0.8-ps duration (full width at
half maximum) were generated by an optical rectification method
using a semi-insulating gallium arsenide substrate. The detector was
a photoconductive antenna. Two off-axis parabolic mirrors and two
hyperhemispherical silicon lenses coupled the radiation into and out
of the fiber, which was 2 cm long. At more than 0.4 THz, the
insertion loss of the fiber was less than 5 dB. Dispersion depended
on wavelength, with a zero-group-velocity-dispersion point existing
at 0.5 THz. Contact Hae-Wook Han at hhan@postech.ac.kr.
Laser Focus World July, 2002
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