Non-linear Optical Device with a Broadened Gain Bandwidth
20200041869 ยท 2020-02-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/3548
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An optical crystal for converting an input light beam, the crystal having an ingress surface, an egress surface, and a fan-out grating has a fan-out pattern oriented at an offset angle in the range of 1 to 45 with respect to a beam entry plane at a beam ingress location.
Claims
1. An optical crystal for converting an input light beam comprising: an ingress surface; an egress surface; and a fan-out grating comprising a fan-out pattern with a fan-out pattern orientation line oriented at an offset angle in the range of 1 to 45 with respect to a beam entry plane at a beam ingress location on the ingress surface.
2. The optical crystal of claim 1, wherein the ingress surface and egress surfaces are substantially planar.
3. The optical crystal of claim 2, wherein the egress surface is substantially parallel to the ingress surface.
4. The optical crystal of claim 1, wherein the optical crystal is used for a type of non-linear frequency conversion selected from one of the group consisting of second-harmonic-generation, sum-frequency-generation, difference-frequency-generation, optical-parametric-generation, and optical-parametric-oscillation.
5. The optical crystal of claim 1, wherein the fan-out pattern further comprises a deliberate phase-shift and/or a missing poled domains.
6. A device comprising the optical crystal of claim 4, wherein an emission is tunable in wavelength and has a linewidth greater than 100 GHz.
7. An optical crystal for converting an input light beam comprising: an ingress surface; an egress surface; and a fan-out grating, further comprising a temperature gradient and/or an electro-optic-effect of the refractive index along the direction of beam propagation.
8. An optical crystal for converting an input light beam comprising: a fan-out grating comprising a fan-out pattern; and a cylindrical exterior wall wherein an axis of the cylindrical exterior wall is substantially normal to the fan-out pattern, wherein the cylindrical exterior wall is configured to admit ingress and/or egress of the light beam.
9. The optical crystal of claim 8, further comprising means for rotating the optical crystal about the axis.
10. The optical crystal of claim 8, further comprising a temperature gradient and/or an electro-optic-effect of the refractive index.
11. The optical crystal of claim 8, wherein the fan-out pattern further comprises a deliberate phase-shift and/or a missing poled domains.
12. A method for forming an optical crystal for converting an input light beam comprising the step of: forming in the optical crystal a fan-out grating comprising fan-out orientation line oriented at an angle with respect to parallel of a crystal ingress surface, wherein the angle is in the range of 1 and 45.
13. A method for forming an optical crystal for converting an input light beam comprising the steps of: receiving an optical crystal comprising a planar first ingress surface and a fan-out grating, the fan-out grating comprising a fan-out orientation line substantially parallel to the first ingress surface; and resurfacing the planar first ingress surface of the crystal.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein said resurfacing of the planar first ingress surface of the crystal forms a planar second ingress surface of the crystal oriented at an angle in the range of 1 and 45 with respect to the planar first ingress surface.
15. The method of claim 13, wherein the optical crystal further comprises a planar first egress surface substantially parallel to the planar first egress surface, and the method further comprises the step of resurfacing the planar first egress surface of the crystal.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein said resurfacing of the planar first egress surface of the crystal forms a planar second egress surface of the crystal oriented at an angle in the range of 1 and 45 with respect to the planar first egress surface.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the planar second egress is substantially parallel to the planar second ingress surface.
18. The method of claim 13, wherein said resurfacing of the planar first ingress surface of the crystal forms a cylindrical exterior ingress surface.
19. The method of claim 18, further comprising the step of modifying the crystal to compensate for a cylindrical lens effect.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the invention, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principals of the invention.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] The following definitions are useful for interpreting terms applied to features of the embodiments disclosed herein, and are meant only to define elements within the disclosure.
[0024] As used within this disclosure, substantially means almost exactly, or to within normal manufacturing tolerances, for example, substantially parallel or substantially normal may indicate insubstantial variations from parallel or normal angles.
[0025] As used within this disclosure, a fan-out orientation line indicates a line within a fan-out crystal that is oriented normal to the intended light path through the crystal. In general, within this application the fan-out pattern of a crystal referred to herein describes the pattern in a plane (depicted as the x-y plane in the drawings) that includes the light beam ingress location and the light beam egress location. Similarly, a rotation of the fan-out pattern indicates a rotation relative to the x-y plane, for example, around an axis in the z-plane.
[0026] Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers are used in the drawings and the description to refer to the same or like parts.
[0027]
[0028] a) SHG (Second-Harmonic-Generation)
[0029] b) SFG (Sum-Frequency-Generation)
[0030] c) DFG (Difference-Frequency-Generation)
[0031] d) OPG/OPO (Optical-Parametric-Generation/-Oscillation)
[0032] For an OPO-process the crystal is disposed inside a resonating cavity, while for SHG, SFG and DFG the crystal may optionally be disposed within a resonating cavity according to the needs of an application, for example if an enhancement of the power-level of a beam is desired.
[0033] For wide wavelength tunability, a periodically Ferro electrically poled crystal 520 with fan-out grating 540 may be used. For nonlinear processes involving wavelength-modulated or broadband radiation often chirped gratings may preferred. The first embodiment preferably uses a crystal 520 having a chirped fan-out grating 540. Some of these crystals 520 may use a rotated fan-out pattern 540, referred to herein as a quasi-chirped fan fan-out pattern. In order to avoid problems arising from dispersion effects, for example, beam-walk-off or angles between beams of different wavelengths outside the crystal 520, the first embodiment 400 (
[0034]
[0035]
[0036] The quasi-chirped fan fan-out pattern 540 of the quasi-chirped fan-out crystal 520 is oriented at an angle in the x-y plane compared to the fan-out pattern of the prior art crystal fan-out 20. The pattern of the quasi-chirped fan-out crystal 520 may be thought of as being rotated by the angle compared to the prior art crystal fan-out 20 around an axis that runs parallel to the light ingress surface 501 (which may be substantially planar in the y-z plane) and the light egress surface 502 and normal to the x-y plane of the center lines 25, 555. Note that while
[0037]
[0038] It should be noted that the progression of a longer period to a shorter period is a result of a counter-clockwise rotation of the fan-out pattern 20 with respect to the crystal 520. A clockwise rotation of the fan-out pattern 20 with respect to the crystal 520 instead results in the path 555 first crossing the shortest band, with the periods getting progressively longer along the path 555. While for simplicity, only the periods of the shaded bands 621-625 are discussed here, the discussion is similarly applicable to the unshaded bands.
[0039] Returning to
[0040] Examples of crystal-materials allowing for ferroelectric poling include doped and undoped variants of lithium Niobate, lithium tantalite or potassium titanyl phosphate, among others. Other poling methods are possible, for example, orientation patterned growth, used for example, with Gallium Arsenide, which does not allow for ferroelectric poling. Crystal sizes may be limited by the grow size of an initial crystal boule, as a non-limiting example, from 1-80 mm. In general, the rotation angle may depend on crystal-size, the fan-out design in detail, and the desired broadening of bandwidth, for example, but not limited to 1 and 45. The number/widths of grating transition regions may depend on the material, the wavelengths in detail and the conversion process. For example, an OPO based on MgO doped lithium Niobate and having a pump-wavelength of 1064 nm utilized poling-period lengths (=one shaded and one unshaded) of 29-32 m to emit wavelengths of 1.45-2 m and 2.3-4 m. As another example, an SHG crystal to transfer wavelengths of 1000-1600 to 500 to 800 nm would have poling-periods of approximately 6 to 13 m on MgO-LN. The operational temperature range may be, for example, from room-temperature up to 200 C. or more, although for a fan-out, it may be preferable to set a fixed temperature and then translate. In general ranges for input bandwidths and wavelengths are selected according to the specific desired process, for example, a length of crystal and (in case of chirping) on the chirp implementation.
[0041]
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[0043] The second embodiment crystal 720 may effectively provide a similar result as the quasi-chirped fan-out crystal 520 of
[0044] Note that
[0045]
[0046] An optical crystal comprising a fan-out grating, a first ingress surface 1 (
[0047] The crystal is resurfaced so that a second ingress surface 501 (
[0048] Alternatively, the crystal grating may be initially formed within the crystal at a desired angle offset to an ingress and/or egress surface. One of several known approaches to creating a nonlinear grating is by the application of a spatially structured electric field to a Ferro-electric material, such as lithium Niobate, above the coercive field of the material, to effect a permanent re-orientation of the atomic crystal structure.
[0049] The above embodiments may be modified to use different grating patterns. In one alternative embodiment the fan-out and chirping effect may be achieved by using ordinary periodically poled crystals but additionally including a gradient of the refractive index along the y-axis (
[0050] In another alternative embodiment the fan-out and enhanced bandwidth effect may be achieved by using fan-out poled crystals with deliberate phase-shifts and missing poled domains fabricated during the poling process. Wavelength tuning may achieved via lateral translation along the y-axis (
[0051] In summary, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the structure of the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. For example, while