Contents
2020
Volume: 8 Issue 5
18 Article(s)

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Reviews
Fiber Optics and Optical Communications
Fully reversible spectral compression of arbitrary pulsed data signals
Luis Romero Cortés, Reza Maram, and José Azaña
Data signals consisting of arbitrarily modulated sequences of pulses are extensively used for processing and communication applications. The spectral extent of such signals is determined by the bandwidth of the individual pulses in the sequence, which imposes a fundamental limit to the maximum amount of information that can be transmitted or processed per time period. In this work, we propose and experimentally demonstrate that the frequency spectrum occupied by a data-modulated pulse sequence can be significantly compressed to well below the individual pulse bandwidth while still maintaining the temporal duration of the pulses in the sequence and without losing any of the information carried by the signal. The proposed method involves fully reversible linear transformations of the data signal along the time and frequency domains. We demonstrate successful pulse-shape-preserving spectral compression and subsequent full waveform and information recovery of a ~10 Gb/s optical pulse sequence, modulated by an arbitrary data pattern, liberating over 60% of its bandwidth. These findings should prove useful for applications in signal processing, communications, and others.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 23, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 659 (2020)
Physical Optics
Circular Dammann gratings for enhanced control of the ring profile of perfect optical vortices
Junjie Yu, Chaofeng Miao, Jun Wu, and Changhe Zhou
Perfect optical vortices (POVs) provide a solution to address the challenge induced by strong dependence of classical optical vortices on their carried topological charges. However, traditional POVs are all shaped into bright rings with a single main lobe along the radial direction. Here we propose a method for enhanced control on the ring profile (the radial intensity profile of circular rings) of POVs based on modulated circular sine/cosine radial functions, which is realized by a circular Dammann grating embedded with a spiral phase. Specifically, a type of “absolute” dark POVs surrounded by two bright lobe rings in each side is presented, which provides a perfect annular potential well along those dark impulse rings for trapping low-index particles, cells, or quantum gases. In addition, several POVs with different ring profiles, including conventional POVs with bright rings, the dark POVs mentioned above, and also POVs with tunable ring profiles, are demonstrated. This work opens up new possibilities to controllably tune the ring profile of perfect vortices, and this type of generalized POVs will enrich the content of singular optics and expand the application scope of perfect vortices in a range of areas including optical manipulation, both quantum and classical optical communications, enhanced optical imaging, and also novel structured pumping lasers.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 21, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 648 (2020)
Enhanced nonlinear instabilities in photonic circuits with exceptional point degeneracies
Suwun Suwunnarat, Rodion Kononchuk, Andrey Chabanov, Ilya Vitebskiy, Nicholaos I. Limberopoulos, and Tsampikos Kottos
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 30, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 737 (2020)
Measuring high orbital angular momentum of vortex beams with an improved multipoint interferometer
Qi Zhao, Miao Dong, Yihua Bai, and Yuanjie Yang
A multipoint interferometer (MI), uniformly distributed point-like pinholes in a circle, was proposed to measure the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of vortex beams [Phys. Rev. Lett.101, 100801 (2008)PRLTAO0031-900710.1103/PhysRevLett.101.100801], which can be used for measuring OAM of light from astronomical sources. This is a simple and robust method; however, it is noted that this method is only available for low topological charge because the diffracted intensity patterns for vortex beams with higher OAM will repeat periodically. Here, we propose an improved multipoint interferometer (IMI) for measuring the OAM of an optical vortex with high topological charge. The structure of our IMI is almost the same as the MI, but the size of each pinhole is larger than a point in the MI. Such a small change enables each pinhole to get more phase information from the incident beams; accordingly, the IMI can distinguish any vortex beams with different OAM. We demonstrate its viability both theoretically and experimentally.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 30, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 745 (2020)
Research Articles
Instrumentation and Measurements
Distributed Brillouin frequency shift extraction via a convolutional neural network
Yiqing Chang, Hao Wu, Can Zhao, Li Shen, Songnian Fu, and Ming Tang
Distributed optical fiber Brillouin sensors detect the temperature and strain along a fiber according to the local Brillouin frequency shift (BFS), which is usually calculated by the measured Brillouin spectrum using Lorentzian curve fitting. In addition, cross-correlation, principal component analysis, and machine learning methods have been proposed for the more efficient extraction of BFS. However, existing methods only process the Brillouin spectrum individually, ignoring the correlation in the time domain, indicating that there is still room for improvement. Here, we propose and experimentally demonstrate a BFS extraction convolutional neural network (BFSCNN) to retrieve the distributed BFS directly from the measured two-dimensional data. Simulated ideal Brillouin spectra with various parameters are used to train the BFSCNN. Both the simulation and experimental results show that the extraction accuracy of the BFSCNN is better than that of the traditional curve fitting algorithm with a much shorter processing time. The BFSCNN has good universality and robustness and can effectively improve the performances of existing Brillouin sensors.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 24, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 690 (2020)
Lasers and Laser Optics
Low threshold random lasing in dye-doped and strongly disordered chiral liquid crystals
Shaohua Gao, Jiayi Wang, Wenhua Li, Xuanyi Yu, Xinzheng Zhang, Xiao Song, Andrey Iljin, Irena Drevensek-Olenik, Romano A. Rupp, and Jingjun Xu
Random lasing was experimentally investigated in pyrromethene 597-doped strongly disordered chiral liquid crystals (CLCs) composed of the nematic liquid crystal SLC1717 and the chiral agent CB15. The concentration of the chiral agent tuned the bandgap, and disordered CLC microdomains were achieved by fast quenching of the mixture from the isotropic to the cholesteric phase. Random lasing and band edge lasing were observed synchronously, and their behavior changed with the spectral location of the bandgap. The emission band for band edge lasing shifted with the change of the bandgap, while the emission band for random lasing remained practically constant. The results show that the threshold for random lasing sharply decreases if the CLC selective reflection band overlaps with the fluorescence peak of the dye molecules and if the band edge coincides at the same time with the excitation wavelength.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 20, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 642 (2020)
Narrow-linewidth thermally tuned multi-channel interference widely tunable semiconductor laser with thermal tuning power below 50 mW
Quanan Chen, Chun Jiang, Kuankuan Wang, Miao Zhang, Xiang Ma, Ye Liu, Qiaoyin Lu, and Weihua Guo
A thermally tuned multi-channel interference widely tunable semiconductor laser is designed and demonstrated, for the first time to our knowledge, that realizes a tuning range of more than 45 nm, side-mode suppression ratios up to 56 dB, and Lorentzian linewidth below 160 kHz. AlGaInAs multiple quantum wells (MQWs) were used to reduce linewidth, which have a lower linewidth enhancement factor compared with InGaAsP MQWs. To decrease the power consumption of micro-heaters, air gaps were fabricated below the arm phase sections. For a 75 μm long suspended thermal tuning waveguide, about 6.3 mW micro-heater tuning power is needed for a 2π round-trip phase change. Total micro-heater tuning power required is less than 50 mW across the whole tuning range, which is lower than that of the reported thermally tuned tunable semiconductor lasers.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 23, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 671 (2020)
Deep-learning-assisted, two-stage phase control method for high-power mode-programmable orbital angular momentum beam generation
Tianyue Hou, Yi An, Qi Chang, Pengfei Ma, Jun Li, Liangjin Huang, Dong Zhi, Jian Wu, Rongtao Su, Yanxing Ma, and Pu Zhou
High-power mode-programmable orbital angular momentum (OAM) beams have received substantial attention in recent years. They are widely used in optical communication, nonlinear frequency conversion, and laser processing. To overcome the power limitation of a single beam, coherent beam combining (CBC) of laser arrays is used. However, in specific CBC systems used to generate structured light with a complex wavefront, eliminating phase noise and realizing flexible phase modulation proved to be difficult challenges. In this paper, we propose and demonstrate a two-stage phase control method that can generate OAM beams with different topological charges from a CBC system. During the phase control process, the phase errors are preliminarily compensated by a deep-learning (DL) network, and further eliminated by an optimization algorithm. Moreover, by modulating the expected relative phase vector and cost function, all-electronic flexible programmable switching of the OAM mode is realized. Results indicate that the proposed method combines the characteristics of DL for undesired convergent phase avoidance and the advantages of the optimization algorithm for accuracy improvement, thereby ensuring the high mode purity of the generated OAM beams. This work could provide a valuable reference for future implementation of high-power, fast switchable structured light generation and manipulation.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 24, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 715 (2020)
Nanophotonics and Photonic Crystals
Effects of third-order dispersion on temporal soliton compression in dispersion-engineered silicon photonic crystal waveguides
Jiali Liao, Yang Gao, Yanling Sun, Lin Ma, Zhenzhong Lu, and Xiujian Li
High-order temporal soliton compression in dispersion-engineered silicon photonic crystal waveguides will play an important role in future integrated photonic circuits compatible with complementary metal–oxide–semiconductors. Here, we report the physical mechanisms of high-order temporal soliton compression affected by third-order dispersion (TOD) combined with free carrier dispersion (FCD) in a dispersion engineered silicon photonic crystal waveguide with wideband low anomalous dispersion. Through numerical temporal soliton evolution analysis, we report what we believe is the first demonstration of the dual opposite effects of TOD on temporal soliton compression, which are strengthening or weakening through two different physical mechanisms, not only depending on the sign of TOD but also the relative magnitude of TOD-induced equivalent group velocity dispersion (GVD) β2,equ to the original GVD β2. We further find that FCD counteracts the effects of negative TOD on the soliton compression, while it reinforces the effects of positive TOD on the soliton compression. These results will help to design suitable dispersion-engineered silicon waveguides for superior on-chip temporal pulse compression in optical communications and processing application fields.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 24, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 729 (2020)
Optical and Photonic Materials
Photonic engineering of superbroadband near-infrared emission in nanoglass composites containing hybrid metal and dielectric nanocrystals
Zhigang Gao, Haibo Zhu, Bochao Sun, Yingke Ji, Xiaosong Lu, Hao Tian, Jing Ren, Shu Guo, Jianzhong Zhang, Jun Yang, Xiangeng Meng, and Katsuhisa Tanaka
Photonic media containing hybrid noble metal–dielectric nanocrystals (NCs) represent a wonderland of nanophotonics, with a myriad of uncharted optical functions yet to be explored. Capitalizing on the unique phase separation and spontaneous formation of Au-metal NCs in a gallosilicate glass, we fabricated Ni2+-doped transparent nanoglass composites (GCs) containing Au-metal/γ-Ga2O3-dielectric NCs. Compared with GCs free of Au-metal NCs, the superbroadband near-infrared emission of Ni2+ with a full width at half-maximum over 280 nm is enhanced twice in the Au-metal/γ-Ga2O3 dual-phase GCs. A comparison is given as to the spontaneous emission (SPE) properties of Ni2+ in the dual-phase GCs when pumped resonantly and off-resonantly with the localized surface plasmon resonance band of the Au-metal NCs. The important role of the Au-metal NCs in the SPE enhancement is revealed by theoretical simulation based on the finite-element method. Combining the photonic engineering effect of hybrid Au-metal/γ-Ga2O3 NCs and the sensitization effect of Yb3+ on Ni2+, a record-high enhancement factor of over 10 of the Ni2+ NIR emission is achieved, and optical gain is demonstrated in the GCs at the fiber communication wavelength.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 24, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 698 (2020)
Optoelectronics
Full-color micro-LED display with high color stability using semipolar (20-21) InGaN LEDs and quantum-dot photoresist
Sung-Wen Huang Chen, Yu-Ming Huang, Konthoujam James Singh, Yu-Chien Hsu, Fang-Jyun Liou, Jie Song, Joowon Choi, Po-Tsung Lee, Chien-Chung Lin, Zhong Chen, Jung Han, Tingzhu Wu, and Hao-Chung Kuo
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 15, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 630 (2020)
Low-efficiency-droop InGaN quantum dot light-emitting diodes operating in the “green gap”
Chunyu Zhao, Chak Wah Tang, Billy Lai, Guanghui Cheng, Jiannong Wang, and Kei May Lau
Gallium nitride (GaN)-based light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are important for lighting and display applications. In this paper, we demonstrate green-emission (512 nm) InGaN quantum dot (QD) LEDs grown on a c-plane sapphire substrate by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition. A radiative lifetime of 707 ps for the uniform InGaN self-assembled QDs is obtained by time-resolved photoluminescence measurement at 18 K. The screening of the built-in fields in the QDs effectively improves the performance of QD LEDs. These high quantum efficiency and high temperature stability green QD LEDs are able to operate with negligible efficiency droop and with current density up to 106 A/cm2. Our results show that InGaN QDs may be a viable option as the active medium for stable LEDs.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 30, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 750 (2020)
Quantum Optics
Enhanced photon communication through Bayesian estimation with an SNSPD array
Xiang Li, Jingrou Tan, Kaimin Zheng, Labao Zhang, Lijian Zhang, Weiji He, Pengwei Huang, Haochen Li, Biao Zhang, Qi Chen, Rui Ge, Shuya Guo, Tao Huang, Xiaoqing Jia, Qingyuan Zhao, Xuecou Tu, Lin Kang, Jian Chen, and Peiheng Wu
Laser communication using photons should consider not only the transmission environment’s effects, but also the performance of the single-photon detector used and the photon number distribution. Photon communication based on the superconducting nanowire single-photon detector (SNSPD) is a new technology that addresses the current sensitivity limitations at the level of single photons in deep space communication. The communication’s bit error rate (BER) is limited by dark noise in the space environment and the photon number distribution with a traditional single-pixel SNSPD, which is unable to resolve the photon number distribution. In this work, an enhanced photon communication method was proposed based on the photon number resolving function of four-pixel array SNSPDs. A simulated picture transmission was carried out, and the error rate in this counting mode can be reduced by 2 orders of magnitude when compared with classical optical communication. However, in the communication mode using photon-enhanced counting, the four-pixel response amplitude for counting was found to restrain the communication rate, and this counting mode is extremely dependent on the incident light intensity through experiments, which limits the sensitivity and speed of the SNSPD array’s performance advantage. Therefore, a BER theoretical calculation model for laser communication was presented using the Bayesian estimation algorithm in order to analyze the selection of counting methods for information acquisition under different light intensities and to make better use of the SNSPD array’s high sensitivity and speed and thus to obtain a lower BER. The counting method and theoretical model proposed in this work refer to array SNSPDs in the deep space field.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 17, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 637 (2020)
Silicon Photonics
Laser trimming of the operating wavelength of silicon nitride racetrack resonators
Greta De Paoli, Senta L. Jantzen, Thalia Dominguez Bucio, Ilias Skandalos, Christopher Holmes, Peter G. R. Smith, Milan M. Milosevic, and Frederic Y. Gardes
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 23, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 677 (2020)
Ultrahigh-Q silicon racetrack resonators | On the Cover
Long Zhang, Lanlan Jie, Ming Zhang, Yi Wang, Yiwei Xie, Yaocheng Shi, and Daoxin Dai
An ultrahigh-Q silicon racetrack resonator is proposed and demonstrated with uniform multimode silicon photonic waveguides. It consists of two multimode straight waveguides connected by two multimode waveguide bends (MWBs). In particular, the MWBs are based on modified Euler curves, and a bent directional coupler is used to achieve the selective mode coupling for the fundamental mode and not exciting the higher-order mode in the racetrack. In this way, the fundamental mode is excited and propagates in the multimode racetrack resonator with ultralow loss and low intermode coupling. Meanwhile, it helps achieve a compact 180° bend to make a compact resonator with a maximized free spectral range (FSR). In this paper, for the chosen 1.6 μm wide silicon photonic waveguide, the effective radius Reff of the designed 180° bend is as small as 29 μm. The corresponding FSR is about 0.9 nm when choosing 260 μm long straight waveguides in the racetrack. The present high-Q resonator is realized with a simple standard single-etching process provided by a multiproject wafer foundry. The fabricated device, which has a measured intrinsic Q-factor as high as 2.3×106, is the smallest silicon resonator with a >106Q-factor.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 23, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 684 (2020)
Surface Optics and Plasmonics
Gap-surface plasmon metasurfaces for linear-polarization conversion, focusing, and beam splitting
Fei Ding, Yiting Chen, and Sergey I. Bozhevolnyi
Gap-surface plasmon (GSP) metasurfaces have attracted progressively increasing attention due to their planar configurations, ease of fabrication, and unprecedented capabilities in manipulating the reflected fields that enable integrating diverse bulk-optic-based optical components into a single ultrathin flat element. In this work, we design and experimentally demonstrate multifunctional metalenses that perform simultaneous linear-polarization conversion, focusing, and beam splitting, thereby reproducing the combined functionalities of conventional half-wave plates, parabolic reflectors, and beam splitters. The fabricated single-focal metalens incorporates properly configured distinct half-wave-plate-like GSP meta-atoms and exhibits good performance under linearly polarized incidence in terms of orthogonal linear-polarization conversion (>75%) and focusing (overall efficiency>22%) in the wavelength spectrum ranging from 800 to 950 nm. To further extend the combined functionalities, we demonstrate a dual-focal metalens that splits and focuses a linearly polarized incident beam into two focal spots while maintaining the capability of orthogonal linear-polarization conversion. Furthermore, the power distribution between two split beams can readily be controlled by judiciously positioning the incident beam. The demonstrated multifunctional GSP-based metalenses mimic the combined functionalities of a sequence of discrete bulk optical components, thereby eliminating the need for their mutual alignment and opening new perspectives in the development of ultracompact and integrated photonic devices.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 24, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 707 (2020)
Zero-order-free meta-holograms in a broadband visible range
Rao Fu, Liangui Deng, Zhiqiang Guan, Sheng Chang, Jin Tao, Zile Li, and Guoxing Zheng
The unwanted zero-order light accompanied by the birth of diffractive optical elements and caused mainly by fabrication errors and wavelength variations is a key factor that deteriorates the performance of diffraction-related optical devices such as holograms, gratings, beam shapers, beam splitters, optical diffusers, and diffractive microlenses. Here, inspired by the unique characteristic of nano-polarizer-based metasurfaces for both positive and negative amplitude modulation of incident light, we propose a general design paradigm to eliminate zero-order diffraction without burdening the metasurface design and fabrication. The experimentally demonstrated meta-hologram, which projects a holographic image with a wide angle of 70°×70° in the far field, presents a very low zero-order intensity (only 0.7% of the total energy of the reconstructed image). More importantly, the zero-order-free meta-hologram has a large tolerance limit for wavelength variations (under a broadband illumination from 520 to 660 nm), which brings important technical advances. The strategy proposed could significantly relieve the fabrication difficulty of metasurfaces and be viable for various diffractive-optics-related applications including holography, laser beam shaping, optical data storage, vortex beam generation, and so on.
Photonics Research
  • Publication Date: Apr. 24, 2020
  • Vol. 8, Issue 5, 723 (2020)