Gate-tunable graphene-ferroelectric hybrid structure for photonics and plasmonics
US-9184553-B2 · Nov 10, 2015 · US
US10193296B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10193296-B2 |
| Application number | US-201515536170-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 15, 2015 |
| Priority date | Dec 15, 2014 |
| Publication date | Jan 29, 2019 |
| Grant date | Jan 29, 2019 |
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A pulsed fiber generator is configured with a unidirectional ring waveguide configured to emit a train of pulses. The ring waveguide includes multiple fiber amplifiers, chirping fiber components coupled to respective outputs of first and second fiber amplifiers, and multiple spectral filters coupled to respective outputs of the chirping components. The filters have respective spectral band passes centered around different central wavelengths so as to provide leakage of light along the ring cavity in response to nonlinear processes induced in the ring cavity. The pulse generator operates at a preliminary stage during which it is configured to develop a pitch to a signal, and at a steady stage during which it is configured to output a train of pulses through an output coupler at most once per a single round trip of the signal.
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The invention claimed is: 1. A fiber pulse generator for emitting a train of pulses each with a desired spectral width, duration and energy, comprising a plurality of fiber chains connected to one another to define a ring cavity which unidirectionally guides a signal therealong, the fiber chains each being configured with: a fiber amplifier operative to increase an intensity of the signal to a desired intensity, an optical fiber receiving the signal with the desired intensity sufficient to broaden a spectral width of the signal to a desired spectral width at an output of the optical fiber, and a spectral filter coupled to the output of the optical fiber and having a bandpass, wherein the bandpasses of respective optical filters of the fiber chains are centered on respective frequency components spectrally spaced from one another to allow the signal to sequentially overlap the bandpasses of respective filters, at least one of the fiber chains including an output coupler which is directly coupled to the output of the optical fiber and configured to guide the pulses with the desired spectral width, duration and energy outside the ring cavity. 2. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 further comprising: a plurality of pumps each launching a CW radiation which is coupled into the fiber amplifier and has a wavelength differing from that of the pulses; and a plurality of seed sources each outputting respective etalon pulses to initiate the signal before turning the pumps on, the seed sources being deenergized after the pumps are on, the etalon pulses propagating around the ring cavity at a repetition rate different from a repetition rate of the signal pulses and, when coupled into the fiber amplifier, lower an accumulated energy therein to an energy level insufficient for developing Q-switch pulses in the ring cavity. 3. The fiber pulse generator of claim 2 , wherein the central frequencies of respective optical filters spectrally do not overlap one another and block a continuous wave (“CW ”) radiation from propagating through the ring cavity or overlap so as to pass less than 0.1% of the CW radiation. 4. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 further comprising a plurality of pumps each configured to: initially output a pre-pulse sufficient to initiate noises within a required spectral region which includes at least one pitch propagating through the fiber amplifiers, fibers and filters of the respective two fiber chains to help develop the pitch to the signal with the desired spectral width and intensity, and thereafter output continuous wave (CW) radiation, the central frequencies of respective optical filters are spectrally spaced apart so that the bandpasses of respective optical filters overlap one another, a spectral region between overlapped bandpasses being configured to provide circulation of an unfiltered part of the CW radiation along the ring cavity sufficient to reduce an accumulated energy in the fiber amplifiers to a level insufficient for developing Q-switch pulses, the filters being configured with respective transmittance amplitudes which are equal to one another or different from one another. 5. The fiber pulse generator of claim 4 , wherein the central frequencies of respective optical filters being spaced apart so that the bandpasses of respective filters overlap one another to define a spectral region therebetween configured to pass less than 10% of a maximum transmittance of one of the filters with a highest transmittance. 6. The fiber pulse generator of claim 5 , wherein the overlapped zone is configured to pass at most 0.1% of a maximum transmittance of the other filter with a lowest transmittance. 7. The fiber pulse generator of claim 4 , wherein the pre-pulse has a pulse duration which can vary from a fraction of a millisecond to several milliseconds and a power higher than that of the CW radiation. 8. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the fiber chains each are configured to have a normal net dispersion or an anomalous net dispersion, the spectrally broadened signal pulse being temporally stretched while propagating through the fiber chains. 9. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the fiber chains defining the ring cavity each are configured to have a zero net dispersion. 10. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the spectrally broadened signal pulse is a linearly chirped pulse. 11. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 further comprising an additional output coupler coupled to an output of the other optical fiber, wherein the pulse with the desired spectral width, intensity and energy is output from the ring cavity every half of the round trip. 12. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the bandpasses of respective spectral filters have respective identical bandwidths or identical amplitude transmittances or identical bandwidths and transmittance amplitudes. 13. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the bandpasses of respective spectral filters have different bandwidths with one of them being at most five times greater than the other one. 14. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the fiber chains each is configured in a polarization maintaining (PM) format or not PM format. 15. The fiber pulse generator of claim 7 , wherein sequentially launched etalon pulses have respective gradually decreasing amplitudes or uniform amplitudes to provide lowering of an energy accumulated in the fiber amplifiers to a level insufficient for developing Q-switch pulses in the ring cavity. 16. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the fiber amplifiers each are configured to have a multimode core provided with opposite relatively small uniform diameter end regions and a central uniformly configured region having a diameter larger than that of the end regions, the multimode core being configured to support only a fundamental mode at an operating wavelength of the signal pulses. 17. The pulse generator of claim 1 , wherein the fiber amplifiers each are configured with a single transverse mode active fiber. 18. The fiber pulse generator of claim 16 or 17 further comprising single transverse mode passive fibers coupled to the respective opposite ends of each amplifier. 19. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 further comprising at least one isolator coupled between two fiber chains. 20. The fiber pulse generator of claim 2 further comprising input couplers guiding output of the plurality of pumps and the plurality of seed sources into the ring cavity. 21. The fiber pulse generator of claim 5 or 7 wherein the pumps are configured to side-pump or end-pump respective amplifiers. 22. The fiber pulse generator of claim 1 wherein the bandpasses of respective filters each are at narrower or broader than the desired spectral width of the pulse. 23. A ring cavity fiber laser for creating and outputting ultrafast pulses, comprising a plurality of fiber chains coupled one to the other to define a ring cavity, each fiber chain including a fiber amplifier, a pulse chirping component, and an optical filter coupled to an output of the pulse chirping component and having a bandpass; and an output coupler directly coupled to the output of the chirping component to guide the pulses outside the ring cavity, wherein bandpasses of respective optical filters of the fiber chains are centered on respective frequency components spectrally spaced from one another. 24. The ring cavity fiber
Mode locking; Q-switching; Other giant-pulse techniques, e.g. cavity dumping · CPC title
Fibre characterized by a specific dispersion, e.g. for pulse shaping in soliton lasers or for dispersion compensating [DCF] · CPC title
Passive mode locking · CPC title
by controlling devices placed within the cavity · CPC title
by a filter, e.g. a Fabry-Perot filter is used for wavelength setting · CPC title
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