ausblenden:
Schlagwörter:
PHOTONIC CRYSTAL FIBER; OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY; CONTINUUM
GENERATION; CHALCOGENIDE GLASSES; MU-M; SYSTEM; COMB; NMOptics;
Zusammenfassung:
Efficient generation of a broad-band mid-infrared supercontinuum spectrum is reported in an arsenic trisulphide waveguide embedded in silica. A chalcogenide "nano-spike", designed to transform the incident light adiabatically into the fundamental mode of a 2-mm-long uniform section 1 mu m in diameter, is used to achieve high launch efficiencies. The nano-spike is fully encapsulated in a fused silica cladding, protecting it from the environment. Nano-spikes provide a convenient means of launching light into sub-wavelength scale waveguides. Ultrashort (65 fs, repetition rate 100 MHz) pulses at wavelength 2 mu m, delivered from a Tm-doped fiber laser, are launched with an efficiency similar to 12% into the sub-wavelength chalcogenide waveguide. Soliton fission and dispersive wave generation along the uniform section result in spectral broadening out to almost 4 mu m for launched energies of only 18 pJ. The spectrum generated will have immediate uses in metrology and infrared spectroscopy. (C) 2013 Optical Society of America