High-speed wavelength-swept source at 2.0 µm and its application in imaging through a scattering medium.
Opt Lett
; 42(8): 1540-1543, 2017 Apr 15.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-28409792
We report a high-speed wavelength-swept source operating at 2.0 µm through advanced time-stretch technology. It sweeps over 30 nm at a speed of 3.3×109 nm/s and a repetition rate of â¼19 MHz. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a megahertz-stable swept source has been implemented at such a long wavelength. A wide bandwidth is enabled by a simple mode-locked fiber laser that covers a wavelength range of â¼60 nm. The all-optical wavelength sweeping is realized by a chirped fiber Bragg grating (CFBG), which shows a superior temporal stability and power efficiency, compared with commonly used dispersive fibers, particularly in the 2.0 µm wavelength window. To showcase its specialties, here we employ it to perform high-speed spectrally-encoded microscopy (i.e., time-stretch imaging) through a scattering medium at a line-scan rate of up to â¼19 MHz. Better image quality is achieved, compared with a conventional imaging window at 1.0 µm. It is believed that the potential applications of this new high-speed swept source will benefit the transient diagnosis that requires deep penetration through a scattering medium.
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2017
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Article