Abstract
1. INTRODUCTION
Since the vectorial optical fields were first carried out by Snitzer in 1961 [1], there has been an increasing attention in vector beams due to their special spatially inhomogeneous polarization states across the transverse section of the beams. The generation of such vector beams can be classified into active and passive methods. Grating mirrors or Brewster prisms [2,3] can be used to select the desired polarization mode in intra-cavity, which is the active method. The passive methods are based on the polarization reconstruction of traditional laser with the aid of spatial light modulators (SLMs) [4], q-plates [5], and metasurfaces [6]. The distinctive polarization distribution of vector beams results in unique properties when they interact with matter and offers advantages in lots of fields. Radially polarized vector beams can be focused into a tighter spot than that of spatially homogeneous polarization beams and form a strong and localized longitudinal component [7], which can be widely used in optical trapping [8,9], high-accuracy laser micromachining [10,11], and optical super-resolution imaging [12]. The special polarization of such vector beams can excite plasmonic beams with special polarization [13]. The high dimensionality of vector beams enhances channel capacity, which can be applied in classical and quantum communication. Vector beams suffer less from turbulent atmosphere than Gaussian beams [14], which are suitable for long-range optical communications in complex environments [15].
With the continued development of laser applications, there has been a growing need for a diversity of laser wavelengths. Nonlinear frequency conversion is an effective method to extend the range of obtainable wavelengths from existing laser sources. Therefore, nonlinear frequency conversion of vector beams has been proposed in recent years. Nonlinear frequency conversion of vector beams by using two cascading orthogonally placed nonlinear crystals in the three-wave mixing process was demonstrated in 2018 [16]. Nonlinear generation of ultrafast and high-order vector vortex beams through a single-pass second-harmonic generation (SHG) process has also been demonstrated by using such a dual crystal scheme [17]. Then, SHG [18] and third-harmonic generation (THG) [19] of vector beams in a Sagnac loop have been demonstrated. In addition, nonlinear generation of vector beams can also be achieved by using a Mach–Zehnder interferometer [20]. Afterwards, a dual-waveband generator is proposed to simultaneously generate perfect vector beams in linear and nonlinear wavebands [21]. Nonlinear generation of ultraviolet vector beams [22] and perfect vector beams [23] has also been studied. In addition, some studies focus on the vectorial feature of Poincaré beams during the SHG process from infrared waveband to visible full Poincaré beams [24,25]. And a technique to control the coverage of full Poincaré beams through SHG has been discussed [26]. In recent years, stimulated parametric down-conversion [27], parametric up-conversion [28], and conformal frequency conversion [29] processes of such vectorial structured light have also been studied theoretically and experimentally. However, all these methods are conducted in two steps to obtain vector beams of SH: the first step is to generate the vectorial optical fields by using the linear optical method, and the second step is to perform nonlinear transformation processes. Therefore, simplifying the experiment setup with microstructures is highly desired for the generation of vector beams of the SH.
In this paper, we demonstrate a new and compact method to generate nonlinear vectorial beams by using a microstructure, which etches a nonlinear fork grating on the surface of lithium niobate (LN) crystal. First of all, we verify the generation of SH vector beams with different topological charges theoretically and experimentally. Then we measure the polarization properties of the generated SH vector beams by using Stokes parameters, which are in accordance with the theoretical results. And we demonstrate the flexibility of this approach by rotating the axis direction of the half-wave plate (HWP) to change the polarization distributions of generated SH vector beams. Furthermore, we measure the nonlinear frequency conversion efficiency during this nonlinear process.
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2. EXPERIMENT SETUP
The experimental setup is illustrated in Fig. 1. A high-energy diode-pumped all-solid-state -switched linearly polarized laser with the wavelength of 1064 nm, the repetition frequency of 1 kHz, and the pulse duration of 10 ns is used as the light source. A half-wave plate () is used to adjust the polarization of the laser, and a Glan–Taylor (GT) prism is used to control the polarization states to obtain horizontally polarized light . And we can control the intensity of beams by adjusting the angle of the . After that, is used to control the polarization states of generated SH vector beams and a quarter-wave plate () is used to make the beams propagating clockwise and anticlockwise in a Sagnac loop have the same intensity, which can be calculated as
Figure 1.Schematic of the experimental setup. GT prism, Glan–Taylor prism;
Therefore, after passing through the fork-shaped grating, the Jones matrices of beams propagating in opposite directions can be expressed as
Therefore, we can generate vector beams of SH with arbitrary topological charge. And we can generate vector beams with arbitrary polarization states by controlling the microstructure and the angle of the in theory. We would like to point out that we assume the angle of the is when the angle of is 0° in our theoretical analysis. In fact, when rotating the angle of the , the angle of is changed accordingly to make the beams propagating clockwise and anticlockwise in the Sagnac loop have the same intensity in the experiment. Finally, our generated vector beams of SH are recorded by a charge-coupled device (CCD) shown in Fig. 1. A and a polarizer are used to analyze the polarization distributions of generated vector beams of SH.
3. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
We rotate the angle of the to set ; thus, Eq. (6) can be described as . For simplicity and without loss of generality, we generate SH vector optical fields with topological charges , 2, 3. The polarization distribution can be characterized via measuring the Stokes parameters. To illustrate the Stokes parameters, we insert a and a polarizer before the CCD. The theoretical simulation and experimental results of Stokes parameters , , , and of the generated SH vector beams are shown in Fig. 2. Figures 2(a1)–2(a4), 2(c1)–2(c4), and 2(e1)–2(e4) are theoretical simulations, and Figs. 2(b1)–2(b4), 2(d1)–2(d4), and 2(f1)–2(f4) show the corresponding experiment results. The first row of Fig. 2 refers to of the Stokes parameters, which represents the total intensity of SH vector beams. There is a polarization singularity at the center of the nonlinear vector beam. In addition, we can obviously see that the radius of the hollow spots increases with the topological charge increasing. As we know, positive , , and represent the components of linearly polarized beams polarized along the horizontal direction, linearly polarized beams along with respect to the positive horizontal direction, and right-handed circularly polarized beams. Negative values of Stokes parameters describe the orthogonal polarization components. As shown in the second and third rows in Fig. 2, the beams are split into lobes. For the SH vector beams of , the positive and negative polarization directions of distribute along the horizontal and vertical directions, which can be seen in Figs. 2(a2) and 2(b2). In addition, the positive and negative polarization directions of are along and from the positive horizontal direction, which can be seen in Figs. 2(a3) and 2(b3). As for the situation and 3, from Figs. 2(c2), 2(d2), 2(e2), and 2(f2), we find that the positive polarization directions of distribute along 0°, and 0°, , with respect to the positive horizontal direction. And we see that negative polarization directions of appear when the positive polarization directions of rotate 45° and 30° with and 3. The components polarized along the positive polarization direction of are distributed at an angle of 45°, 22.5°, 15° relative to the positive polarization direction of for , 2, 3. From the fourth row of Fig. 2, we observe that the generated SH vector beams almost do not have circularly polarized components. Thus, experimental results are consistent with theoretical ones, and the Stokes parameters distributions reveal the vectorial property of the generated SH vector beams.
Figure 2.Stokes parameters of SH vectorial light field. (a1)–(a4), (c1)–(c4), and (e1)–(e4), respectively, represent the simulated Stokes parameters
Figure 3.First, third, fifth rows and second, fourth, sixth rows, respectively, show the results of the SH vector beams with the topological charge
Figure 4.Experimental results corresponding to the cases of Fig.
To verify the flexibility of the proposed method in generating vector beams of SH with different polarization states, we demonstrate two situations by rotating the axis direction of the () to set and . And the corresponding generated SH vector beams can be described as and , respectively. Figures 3 and 4, respectively, show the theoretical and experimental results of the intensity and polarization distributions. To check the polarization distribution, we placed a polarizer to perform projection measurements for SH vector beams. Polarization directions of the polarizer are, respectively, along 0°, 30°, 60°, 90°, 120°, and 150° with respect to the positive horizontal direction. The arrows represent the polarization direction of the polarizer. And the components polarized in the same direction as that of the polarizer can be recorded, while the orthogonal polarization is extinguished. From Figs. 3 and 4, the vector beams are split into fan-shaped patterns after passing through a polarizer. It is clear that the fan-shaped patterns are completely different when the axis direction of the varies. For the situation with , the azimuthally polarized nonlinear vector beam is displayed, as shown in Fig. 3(b). The direction of the fan-shaped patterns rotates along the perpendicular direction with the orientation of the polarizer, as illustrated in Figs. 3(b1)–3(b6) and Figs. 4(b1)–4(b6). In the case of with , when the polarizer has a polarization direction along the horizontal direction, the maximum intensity distributes at an angle of , from the positive horizontal direction, which can be apparently seen in Figs. 3(c1) and 4(c1). And when the polarizer rotates from 0° to 90°, the four fan-shaped patterns gradually rotate 45°, as shown in Figs. 3(c1)–3(c4) and Figs. 4(c1)–4(c4). Also, the fan-shaped patterns as well rotate to the direction perpendicular to the original polarization distribution as the angle of the polarizer increases to 180°, as shown in Figs. 3(c4)–3(c6) and Figs. 4(c4)–4(c6). From Figs. 3(e1)–3(e6) and Figs. 4(e1)–4(e6), we easily know that when and , the horizontal polarization lobes distribute at an angle of , , with positive horizontal direction, and the six fan-shaped patterns rotate anticlockwise by 60° as the polarizer gradually rotates from 0° to 180°. However, for the situation of , the fan-shaped patterns almost appear at , , relative to the polarization distributions of with , 2, 3. From Fig. 4, we can see that after passing through the polarizer, the polarization and intensity distributions of experimental results are in good agreement with the theoretical simulations. As shown in the first column of Fig. 4, the generated SH vector beams are not perfect doughnut intensity profiles, which may be caused by design precision and fabrication errors of the microstructures. The defects of the cross section of the structure affect the diffraction quality of the grating, and then affect the quality of generating SH vector beams. The vectorial properties of the generated SH vector beams are changed by simply rotating the axis direction of the , and we can achieve vector beams of SH with arbitrary polarization in this way.
Moreover, we also measure the nonlinear frequency conversion efficiency of our method of generating SH vector beams. Figure 5 indicates the generated SH vector beams power () varies as the incident FF beams power () increases before the Sagnac loop. In the experiment, powers of two FF beams separated by the PBS are . and are the refractive indices of the FF beams and SH beams, is the vacuum permittivity, is the speed of light in vacuum, and is the effective interaction area. After nonlinear processes, the powers of the two SH vortex beams propagating in opposite directions in the Sagnac loop are . Therefore, the total power of the generated SH vector beam can be expressed as . From Fig. 5, we can see that the intensity of the generated SH vector beams increases with the FF beams as a quadratic function. As shown in Fig. 5, when , the generated SH vector beams powers are 15.6 μW, 13.7 μW, and 12.2 μW, respectively, with topological charges , 2, and 3. That is because the divergence angle of the vortex beams relative to the center position becomes larger with the topological charge increasing, which leads to phase mismatching in the nonlinear frequency conversion process. Therefore, the intensity of the generated SH vector beams will decrease slightly. As for the efficiency of generating SH vector beams, we consider as an example, and we measure and corresponding to 350 mW and 15.6 μW, respectively. The normalized conversion efficiency of our method can be expressed as . As a result, the conversion efficiency is about . The theoretical nonlinear efficiency of generating SH vector beams is . Because the first-order vortex beam diffracted by the fork grating has a small angle deflection relative to the incident FF beam, the phase-matching condition is not fully satisfied in the nonlinear frequency conversion process, resulting in a decrease of the efficiency of the nonlinear frequency conversion. To generate vector beams with good quality, we make beams propagating clockwise and anticlockwise have the same intensity by changing the angle of the , so that not all FF beams perform nonlinear frequency conversion, thus resulting in a decrease in nonlinear efficiency. The above two reasons are important factors that affect the nonlinear efficiency of generating SH vector beams. Furthermore, the inaccuracy of the temperature in the phase-matching process and cutting angle of the crystal in the experiment also result in the decrease of nonlinear conversion efficiency.
Figure 5.Variation of generated SH vector beams power (
We propose a new way to generate vector beams of SH, which is more compact compared to the previous methods. In our experiments, only partial results are displayed, and we can obtain arbitrary linearly polarized vector beams by rotating the axis direction of the and changing the topological charge of the nonlinear fork grating. However, we find that with the increase of the topological charge, the intensity of generated SH vector beams decreases, as shown in Fig. 5. Therefore, the phase-matching angle bandwidth will be the limit or challenge to generate vector beams with large topological charge. In addition, we can generate more complex nonlinear vector optical fields such as multi-ring structures by designing microstructures purposefully. We employ LN crystal instead of an SLM, and thus our method can be used for high-power lasers. Also, for some frequency ranges that the SLM cannot modulate such as the ultraviolet waveband, it is an effective way to use microstructures of nonlinear crystal for phase modulation. In our experiment, the nonlinear conversion efficiency of generating vector beams of SH is much lower than the theoretical calculation, and we can achieve phase matching better by optimizing the crystal cutting angle and adjusting the temperature condition. Furthermore, our approach has potential use of vectorial fields in other nonlinear processes such as sum-frequency generation, difference-frequency generation, and optical parametric amplification. By choosing proper nonlinear crystals, it is possible to obtain vector beams with arbitrary wavelengths using such a nonlinear frequency conversion process, such as ultraviolet light and terahertz wave.
4. CONCLUSION
In conclusion, we have successfully realized the generation of nonlinear vectorial optical fields by using a compact nonlinear fork grating, which opens up new possibilities for all-optical switching and manipulation of vector beams. In our experiment, SH vector beams of different topological charges , 2, 3 are generated, and we analyze the vectorial properties by Stokes parameters theoretically and experimentally. Furthermore, arbitrary SH vector beams can be obtained by changing the axis direction of the HWP and the topological charge. Our approach may access vector beams at new wavelengths and find potential applications in optical micromanipulation, optical imaging, optical micromachining, classical and quantum optical communication, and so on.
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