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We have developed a high performance atomic frequency standard based on Doppler-free direct frequency comb excitation of a two-photon transition in 87Rb. We demonstrate equivalent performance compared to an identical system based on cw laser excitation of the clock transition. This approach greatly simplifies optical clock architecture and eliminates the need for cw lasers in many two-photon frequency standards. The clock transition linewidth and ac-Stark shift measured directly with the frequency comb are shown to be nearly identical to those obtained using a cw laser of equal average power. We directly count this reference via the frequency comb repetition rate, achieving instabilities of 1.9 × 10-13 at 1 s averaging down to 7.8(38) × 10-15 at 2600 s, currently limited by temperature dependent shifts.
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Uncoupled multicore fibers are promising platforms for advanced optical communications, optical computing, and novel laser systems. In this paper, an injection-locked highly ytterbium (Yb3+)-doped uncoupled-61-core phosphate fiber laser at 1030â nm is reported. The 61-core fiber with a core-to-core pitch of 20â µm was fabricated with the stack-and-draw technique. Each core doped with 6-wt.% Yb3+ ions has a diameter of 3â µm and numerical aperture of 0.2. Linearly polarized single-frequency output of 9.1 W was obtained from the injection-locked cavity with a 10-cm-long gain fiber at a pump power of 23.6 W. The injection locking of all 61 cores was confirmed by inspecting the longitudinal modes of the individual lasers with a scanning Fabry-Perot interferometer. The performance of the injection-locked 61-core fiber laser was characterized and compared to that of the free-running operation in terms of optical spectrum, near- and far-field intensity profiles, and relative intensity noise.
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A single-frequency distributed-Bragg-reflector fiber laser at 980â nm with a quantum defect of less than 0.6% was developed with a 1.5-cm 12 wt% ytterbium-doped phosphate fiber pumped by a 974.5-nm laser diode. Linearly polarized single-longitude-mode laser with a polarization extinction ratio (PER) of nearly 30â dB and spectral linewidth of less than 1.8 kHz was obtained. A maximum output power of 275â mW was measured at a launched pump power of 620â mW. The performance of the single-frequency fiber laser pumped at 909â nm and 976â nm was also characterized. This research demonstrated an approach to high-power single-frequency fiber laser oscillators with mitigated thermal effects.
Asunto(s)
Láseres de Semiconductores , IterbioRESUMEN
Single-frequency fiber lasers with extremely low noise and narrow spectral linewidth have found many scientific and practical applications. There is great interest in developing single-frequency fiber lasers at new wavelengths. In this paper, we report a single-frequency Nd3+-doped phosphate fiber laser operating at 880 nm, which is the shortest demonstrated wavelength for a single-frequency fiber laser thus far, to the best of our knowledge. An output power of 44.5 mW and a slope efficiency of 20.4% with respect to the absorbed pump power were obtained with a 2.5-cm-long 1 wt.% Nd3+-doped phosphate fiber. Our simulation results show that higher single-frequency laser output can be achieved with 1.5 wt.% or 2 wt.% Nd3+-doped phosphate fiber with mitigated ion clustering.
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Compact and robust high-power single-frequency laser oscillators are in great demand for some specific applications where narrow-linewidth lasers with extremely low noise are required. In this paper, we report a single-mode-diode-pumped watt-level single-frequency Yb3+-doped phosphate fiber laser at 1050 nm based on an all-fiber distributed Bragg reflector cavity. A maximum output power of 1.15 W with a slope efficiency of 66% was achieved with 18-mm-long 8 wt.% Yb3+-doped phosphate fiber. Stable, single-longitudinal-mode lasing with a spectral linewidth of 9.6 kHz and polarization extinction ratio of â¼30 dB was obtained.
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Wavelength tunable dysprosium-erbium (Dy3+/Er3+) co-doped ZBLAN (ZrF4-BaF2-LaF3-AlF3-NaF) fiber lasers pumped at 980 nm were developed with a bulk grating blazed at 3.1 µm in the Littrow configuration and their performances were investigated. A wavelength tunable range of 674.4 nm (2709.2 nm -3373.6 nm) was achieved with a 4.5-m 0.25 mol.% Dy3+/ 4 mol.% Er3+ co-doped ZBLAN fiber. Our experiments demonstrated that either Er3+ or Dy3+ can be lasing individually in a Dy3+/Er3+ co-doped ZBLAN fiber and a fiber laser with wavelength tunable range from 2.7 µm to 3.4 µm or longer wavelengths can be achieved with proper fiber and cavity design.
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Spectroscopic properties of erbium (Er3+)-, holmium (Ho3+)-, dysprosium (Dy3+)-doped and Er3+/Ho3+, Er3+/Dy3+ co-doped ZBLAN (ZrF4-BaF2-LaF3-AlF3-NaF) glasses were studied. The experimental results show that efficient energy transfer from Er3+ to Ho3+ and Dy3+ occurs in the Er3+/Ho3+ and Er3+/Dy3+ co-doped ZBLAN glasses, respectively. This valuable discovery enables us to design and develop high power Ho3+-doped and Dy3+-doped ZBLAN fiber lasers in the 3 µm wavelength region that can be pumped with readily available high-efficiency, high-power diode laser pumps at 980 nm.
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Due to their large effective magnetic moment, Dy3+-doped materials have attracted much interest for magneto-optical applications. In this paper, we report highly Dy3+ doped multicomponent glasses with concentrations from 40 wt.% to 75 wt.% and their magneto-optical properties. A Verdet constant of -7.4 rad/T/m at 1950 nm was measured with the 75 wt.% Dy3+-doped glass. This is the highest reported Verdet constant around 2 µm for a paramagnetic glass. Our experimental results show that highly Dy3+-doped glasses are promising isotropic magneto-optical materials for applications in the 2 µm wavelength region.
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Magneto-optical properties of tellurium-arsenic-selenium glass (${{\rm Te}_{20}}{{\rm As}_{30}}{{\rm Se}_{50}}$Te20As30Se50) were measured and analyzed. A Verdet constant of 15.18 rad/T/m at 1950 nm with the figure of merit of more than 8.72 rad/T, which is the highest value reported in glass materials at this wavelength, was measured. Compared to other chalcogenide glasses, such as ${{\rm Ge}_{10}}{{\rm Se}_{90}}$Ge10Se90 and ${{\rm Ge}_{25}}{{\rm As}_{15}}{{\rm S}_{60}}$Ge25As15S60, ${{\rm Te}_{20}}{{\rm As}_{30}}{{\rm Se}_{50}}$Te20As30Se50 glass exhibits higher Verdet constants, broader mid-infrared transparency window, and longer infrared absorption edge, making it a very promising material to fabricate magneto-optical devices for mid-infrared applications.
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GHz repetition rate fundamentally mode-locked lasers have attracted great interest for a variety of scientific and practical applications. A passively mode-locked laser in all-fiber format has the advantages of high stability, maintenance-free operation, super compactness, and reliability. In this paper, we present numerical investigation on passive mode-locking of all-fiber lasers operating at repetition rates of 1-20 GHz. Our calculations show that the reflectivity of the output coupler, the small signal gain of the doped fiber, the total net cavity dispersion, and the modulation depth of the saturable absorber are the key parameters for producing stable fundamentally mode-locked pulses at GHz repetition rates in very short all-fiber linear cavities. The instabilities of GHz repetition rate fundamentally mode-locked all-fiber lasers with different parameters were calculated and analyzed. Compared to a regular MHz repetition rate mode-locked all-fiber laser, the pump power range for the mode-locking of a GHz repetition rate all-fiber laser is much larger due to the several orders of magnitude lower accumulated nonlinearity in the fiber cavity. The presented numerical study provides valuable guidance for the design and development of highly stable mode-locked all-fiber lasers operating at GHz repetition rates.
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Ytterbium (Yb3+)-doped materials have been widely used for high efficiency high energy laser sources at the 1 µm wavelength region because of their very low quantum defect and the unique simple energy level structure of Yb3+, resulting in no excited-state absorption and low occurrence probability of deleterious ion-ion interaction processes. It has been generally recognized that these ion-ion interaction processes have very little influence on the operation of Yb3+-doped fiber lasers at low and moderate power levels. However, our recent study shows that the performance of Yb3+-doped fiber amplifiers operating at low power levels is still influenced by the ion-ion interaction processes due to the large amount of population at the upper laser level 2F5/2. In this paper, experimental evidences of the ion-ion interaction effects in Yb3+-doped fiber amplifiers are presented and a new model including these effects is developed for the numerical simulation. Our experimental and numerical investigations on the 976 nm and 1030 nm Yb3+-doped silica and phosphate fiber amplifiers show that ion-ion interaction has non-negligible impact on the performance of Yb3+-doped fiber amplifiers indeed, and compared to Yb3+-doped silica fibers, Yb3+-doped phosphate fibers suffer much less from the ion-ion interaction effects due to the much less clustered ions.
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A 10 W level 976 nm single-frequency linearly polarized laser source was demonstrated with a two-stage all-fiber amplifier configuration. The continuous-wave output power of 10.1 W was obtained from the second stage amplifier by using a 20/130 µm single-mode, polarization maintaining, 1.5 wt. % ytterbium-doped phosphate double-clad fiber. This all-fiber single-frequency laser source is very promising for watt-level deep ultraviolet laser generation via frequency quadrupling.
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An all-fiber amplifier for a single-frequency blue laser was demonstrated for the first time, to the best of our knowledge. Over 150 mW continuous-wave single-transverse-mode blue laser output was obtained with a 10 m 1000 ppm thulium-doped fluoride fiber pumped by a 1125 nm fiber laser at a power of 2 W. The output power was limited due to the onset of the competitive lasing at 783 nm. Photodarkening and photo-curing of the thulium-doped fiber amplifier were also studied and analyzed.
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A stable dual-wavelength Tm3+:Ho3+ co-doped fiber laser operating above 2 µm based on cascaded single-mode-multimode-single-mode (SMS) fiber structures is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. Based on the theoretical analysis of the transmission properties of the SMS fiber structure, two cascaded SMS fiber devices with different multimode fiber (MMF) lengths were used in our laser system, where one acted as a long-pass filter to suppress the competitive laser below 2 µm, and the other worked as a band-pass filter to select the specific operating wavelengths of the laser. Dual-wavelength operation of the fiber laser at 2002.8 and 2016.1 nm has been achieved in the experiment with a signal to a noise ratio up to 50 dB.
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A novel passively Q-switched all-fiber laser using a single mode-multimode-single mode fiber device as the saturable absorber based on the Kerr effect of multimode interference is reported. Stable Q-switched operation of an Er(3+)/Yb(3+) co-doped fiber laser at 1559.5 nm was obtained at a pump power range of 190-510 mW with the repetition rate varying from 14.1 kHz to 35.2 kHz and the pulse duration ranging from 5.69 µs to 3.86 µs. A maximum pulse energy of 0.8 µJ at an average output power of 27.6 mW was achieved. This demonstrates a new modulation mechanism for realizing Q-switched all-fiber laser sources.
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Raman lasers based on mid-infrared fibers operating at 3-5 µm atmospheric transparency window are attractive sources for several applications. Compared to fluoride and chalcogenide fibers, tellurite fibers are more advantageous for high power Raman fiber laser sources at 3-5 µm because of their broader Raman gain bandwidth, much larger Raman shift and better physical and chemical properties. Here we report on our simulations for the development of 10-watt-level 3-5 µm Raman lasers using tellurite fibers as the nonlinear gain medium and readily available continuous-wave (cw) and Q-switched erbium-doped fluoride fiber lasers at 2.8 µm as the pump sources. Our results show that a watt-level or even ten-watt-level fiber laser source in the 3-5 µm atmospheric transparency window can be achieved by utilizing the 1st- and 2nd-order Raman scattering in the tellurite fiber. The presented numerical study provides valuable guidance for future 3-5 um Raman fiber laser development.
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We report Q-switched pulse operation of holmium (Ho(3+))-doped ZrF(4)-BaF(2)-LaF(3)-AlF(3)-NaF (ZBLAN) at â¼1190 nm in an all-fiber ring laser by using a fiber-optic graphene saturable absorber, which was fabricated by depositing graphene onto the flat surface of a side-polished D-shaped fiber. Stable Q-switched operation was established at a pump power of 180 mW with a repetition rate of 24 kHz and pulse width of 5.7 µs. When the pump power was increased to 1125 mW, 0.44 µJ Q-switched pulses with a repetition rate of 111 kHz and a pulse width of 0.8 µs were generated.
Asunto(s)
Grafito , Holmio/química , Rayos Láser , Metales Pesados/química , Fibras ÓpticasRESUMEN
In-band core-pumped Ho3+-doped ZBLAN fiber lasers at the 1.2 µm region were investigated with different gain fiber lengths. A 2.4 W 1190 nm all-fiber laser with a slope efficiency of 42% was achieved by using a 10 cm long gain fiber pumped at a maximum available 1150 nm pump power of 5.9 W. A 1178 nm all-fiber laser was demonstrated with an output power of 350 mW and a slope efficiency of 6.5%. High Ho3+ doping in ZBLAN is shown to be effective in producing single-frequency fiber lasers and short-length fiber amplifiers immune from stimulated Brillouin scattering.
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Tecnología de Fibra Óptica/instrumentación , Holmio/química , Rayos Láser , Transferencia de Energía , Diseño de Equipo , Análisis de Falla de Equipo , Holmio/efectos de la radiaciónRESUMEN
Fiber lasers have seen progressive developments in terms of spectral coverage and linewidth, output power, pulse energy, and ultrashort pulse width since the first demonstration of a glass fiber laser in 1964. Their applications have extended into a variety of fields accordingly. In this paper, the milestones of glass fiber laser development are briefly reviewed and recent advances of high-power continuous wave, Q-switched, mode-locked, and single-frequency fiber lasers in the 1, 1.5, 2, and 3 µm regions and their applications in such areas as industry, medicine, research, defense, and security are addressed in detail.
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Tecnología de Fibra Óptica/instrumentación , Rayos Láser , Transferencia de Energía , Diseño de Equipo , Análisis de Falla de EquipoRESUMEN
High power mid-infrared (mid-IR) supercontinuum (SC) laser sources in the 3-12 µm region are of great interest for a variety of applications in many fields. Although various mid-IR SC laser sources have been proposed and investigated experimentally and theoretically in the past several years, power scaling of mid-IR SC lasers beyond 3 µm with infrared edges extending beyond 7 µm are still challenges because the wavelengths of most previously used pump sources are below 2 µm. These problems can be solved with the recent development of mode-locked fiber lasers at 3 µm. In this paper, high power mid-IR SC laser sources based on dispersion engineered tellurite and chalcogenide fibers and pumped by ultrafast lasers at 3 µm are proposed and investigated. Our simulation results show that, when a W-type tellurite fiber with a zero dispersion wavelength (ZDW) of 2.7 µm is pumped at 2.78 µm, the power proportion of the SC laser beyond 3 µm can exceed 40% and the attainable SC output power of the proposed solid-cladding tellurite fiber is one order of magnitude higher than that of existing microstructured tellurite fibers. Our calculation also predicts that a very promising super-broadband mid-IR SC fiber laser source covering two atmospheric windows and molecules' "fingerprint" region can be obtained with a microstructured As2Se3 chalcogenide fiber pumped at 2.78 µm.