Short-pulse fiber lasers have attracted great interest in numerous fields, including fiber communication, laser medical treatment, bioengineering, and material processing, owing to their compact structure, high efficiency, and robust stability. Physically, mode locking is an effective method to obtain ultrashort pulses, and it can be divided into active mode locking and passive mode locking. Passive mode locking based on saturable absorbers (SAs) has been widely studied. Among the SA materials, two-dimensional (2D) materials, such as graphene, black phosphorus, and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), are promising candidates due to their distinctive nonlinear saturable absorption ability, ultrafast recovery rate, and low cost. Plenty of passively mode-locked fiber lasers based on 2D materials have been developed to achieve different operating modes, such as continuous wave, Q-switched mode locking, and continuous wave mode locking by changing the pump power. However, due to the relatively fixed optical absorption characteristics of 2D materials, switchable operating modes of a mode-locked laser system are difficult to achieve without external modulation. The present study reports a novel kind of electro-optic modulator that is composed of graphene oxide (GO) and polystyrene (PS) microspheres and exhibits adjustable absorption characteristics under the action of an external electric field. The designed modulator, with a high optical transmission capability, enables electrically modulated fiber lasers to be switched among various operating modes, including continuous wave, Q-switched mode locking, and continuous wave mode locking. The proposed basic strategy and findings are expected to facilitate the design of new switchable ultrashort-pulse lasers based on electro-optic modulators.
The GO/PS all-fiber capacitive device is mainly prepared on a quartz substrate by the microelectronic printing process, and the main preparation process is presented in Fig. 1. Improving the modulation efficiency of the device requires a straightforward, low-cost, and effective approach in which PS microspheres can enhance the interaction area between the laser and the material by creating a local field to restrict the divergence of the evanescent light. The modulation characteristics of the modulator can be studied by measuring the optical characteristic curve of the device. The results show that the saturated absorption by the GO in the modulator can easily be achieved at 1550 nm when the driving voltage is applied, indicating enhanced optical transmission efficiency. Finally, an all-fiber mode-locked ring laser system is studied and constructed. The operating mode of the laser can be actively switched by integrating the device with the laser system and applying different electrical fields.
This study presents the preparation, characterization, and analysis of a novel all-fiber capacitive device based on the GO/PS composite, which can serve as a saturable absorber in all-fiber mode-locked ring laser systems. Due to the variation of chemical potential and internal carrier concentration of the GO, the optical absorption characteristics of the GO can be adjusted by an external electrical field. The effective interaction area between the GO and the evanescent light is strictly limited by the device specification. For this reason, an effective method of combining the GO with PS microspheres is adopted. According to the principle of optical waveguides, the evanescent light leaked from the fiber is confined to the GO/PS microspheres. A local field is thereby created, ultimately enhancing the effective utilization of the evanescent light. The mode switching of the laser is successfully implemented by changing the driving voltage, and the pulse width of the mode-locked pulse signal is reduced to 20 ps. In addition, the insertion loss of the device is lowered from 2.30 dB to 0.86 dB and the average output power of the laser is increased from 1.09 mW to 1.52 mW by adjusting the amplitude of the applied voltage. The proposed all-fiber capacitive device is expected to further promote the development of switchable pulsed fiber lasers due to its compatibility and high modulation efficiency.