FEMTOSECOND LASER SOURCE
20190173256 · 2019-06-06
Inventors
- Sébastien FEVRIER (Bosmie-L'Aiguille, FR)
- Leonid KOTOV (LIMOGES, FR)
- Ammar Hideur (Le Petit Quevilly, FR)
Cpc classification
H01S3/06725
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01S3/30
ELECTRICITY
A61B5/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A femtosecond laser source includes an injection laser oscillator with an optical fiber doped with a given material, suitable for delivering, via an output optical fiber, a first picosecond pulse, at a first wavelength .sub.1; a power amplifier with an amplifying optical fiber for producing, from the first pulse, a second pulse at the first wavelength, with an energy that is amplified relative to the first pulse, the amplifying optical fiber being doped with the same material as the optical fiber of the injection oscillator and having a length less than or equal to the distance from the point of soliton compression and greater than the distance from which the amplifying optical fiber operates in non-linear mode; a fiber with a frequency shift suitable for receiving the second pulse and generating, by Raman self-shifting, a fundamental soliton at a second wavelength .sub.2 that is strictly greater than the first wavelength .sub.1.
Claims
1. A femtosecond laser source comprising: an injecting laser oscillator based on optical fiber doped with a given dopant, suitable for delivering, via an exit optical fiber, a first picosecond pulse, at a first wavelength Xi; a power amplifier based on amplifying optical fiber for producing, from the first pulse, a second pulse, at the first wavelength, with an energy that is amplified with respect to the first pulse, the amplifying optical fiber being doped with the same dopant as the optical fiber of the injecting oscillator, and having a length smaller than or equal to the distance of the soliton compression point and larger than the distance from which the amplifying optical fiber operates in non-linear regime; and a frequency-shifting fiber suitable for receiving the second pulse and generating by Raman self-shifting a fundamental soliton at a second wavelength .sub.2 strictly longer than the first wavelength .sub.1.
2. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, wherein the amplifying optical fiber has a modal area larger than or equal to 200 .sub.1.sup.2.
3. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, wherein the frequency-shifting fiber has a modal area larger than that of the amplifying fiber.
4. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, wherein the injecting laser oscillator is a fiber oscillator with chromatic dispersion management and that is configured to generate frequency-chirped pulses.
5. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, wherein the injecting laser oscillator comprises a soliton oscillator that delivers pulses that are not frequency chirped.
6. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 4, wherein the soliton oscillator is followed by a normal-dispersion optical fiber configured to temporally stretch the pulses generated by the injecting laser oscillator.
7. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, wherein the dopant is chosen from the group comprising ytterbium, praseodymium, erbium, thulium, holmium and bismuth.
8. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, wherein the amplifying optical fiber and the frequency-shifting fiber are spliced to each other.
9. The femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, furthermore comprising a high-pass filter for removing pulse residues at the first wavelength .sub.1.
10. An imaging system comprising a femtosecond laser source as claimed in claim 1, said source being suitable for emitting pulses toward an object located at depth in a biological medium, and a microscope for forming and acquiring an image of the object from fluorescence light backscattered by the object.
11. A method for generating femtosecond laser pulses, comprising producing, with an injecting oscillator based on optical fiber doped with a given dopant, a first picosecond pulse, at a first wavelength .sub.1; producing, with a power amplifier based on amplifying optical fiber, from the first pulse, a second pulse, at the first wavelength, with an energy that is amplified with respect to the first pulse, the amplifying optical fiber being doped with the same dopant as the optical fiber of the injecting oscillator, and having a length smaller than or equal to the distance of the soliton compression point and larger than the distance from which the amplifying optical fiber operates in non-linear regime; and producing, by Raman self-shifting, by means of a frequency-shifting fiber suitable for receiving the second pulse, a fundamental soliton at a second wavelength .sub.2 strictly longer than the first wavelength .sub.1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0027] Other advantages and features of the technique/technology presented above will become apparent on reading the description that is detailed below, which is given with reference to the figures, in which:
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0036]
[0037] The laser source 200A shown in
[0041] The laser source 200A generates a train of optical pulses that are conveyed, by means of an exit optical component 240, toward a microscope 250 allowing images to be formed and acquired.
[0042] The injecting laser oscillator 211 comprises at least one optical fiber that is doped with a given dopant. The doped optical fiber of the injecting laser oscillator 211 is for example an optical fiber made of a given luminescent material (glass or vitreous matrix) doped with a given dopant. The dopant is an optically active material, i.e. a material that, under excitation (for example by pumping lasers internal to the laser oscillator 211), emits coherent light at a given wavelength. In one or more embodiments, this doped optical fiber is an amplifying fiber internal to the injecting laser oscillator 211. In one or more embodiments, the dopant is an ion, for example a rare-earth ion. The rare earth is for example neodymium (of chemical symbol Nd), ytterbium (of chemical symbol Yb), praseodymium (of chemical symbol Pr), erbium (of chemical symbol Er), thulium (of chemical symbol Tm), holmium (of chemical symbol Ho), or any other fluorescent element that is soluble in the vitreous matrix forming the fiber, such as for example bismuth (of chemical symbol Bi).
[0043] The injecting laser oscillator 211 produces as output, via an exit optical fiber 212, a first train of laser pulses IL1, at a first wavelength .sub.1. The laser pulses IL1 are picosecond (ps) pulses. In the context of the present description, a picosecond pulse is a pulse of duration comprised between 1 and 100 ps. The repetition rate of the laser pulses IL1 is for example comprised between 0.1 and 100 MHz.
[0044] In at least one embodiment of the laser source 200A, the injecting laser oscillator 211 is a phase-wise mode-locked fiber laser oscillator. Such locking of the longitudinal modes of the injecting laser oscillator allows picosecond pulses to be obtained. Other types of lasers, for example gain-switched lasers, also allow picosecond pulses to be obtained.
[0045] The first wavelength .sub.1 depends on the dopant of the doped optical fiber of the injecting laser oscillator 211. When the dopant is erbium, the first wavelength .sub.1 is about 1555 nm. More generally, depending on the chosen dopant, the wavelength .sub.1 may be comprised between 900 and 2200 nm.
[0046] The power amplifier 220 generates, from the first train of laser pulses IL1, a second train of laser pulses IL2, at the first wavelength .sub.1. These laser pulses IL2 have an energy that is amplified with respect to the laser pulses IL1.
[0047] The amplifying optical fiber 229 of the power amplifier 220 is doped with the same dopant as the doped optical fiber of the injecting laser oscillator 211 so that the transfer function representing the gain of the amplifier is matched to the spectrum of the pulse produced in the oscillator and thus the spectral components of this pulse are preserved.
[0048] Within the amplifying optical fiber 229, the energy of the pulse IL2 increases exponentially with propagation distance within the amplifying optical fiber 229, but the central wavelength of the pulse IL2 does not vary.
[0049] In at least one embodiment, the length of the amplifying optical fiber 229 is chosen so as to be larger than the distance from which the amplifying optical fiber 229 operates in non-linear regime. Apart from the amplifying effect, the amplifying optical fiber 229 has, on the first train of laser pulses IL1, non-linear effects, i.e. effects that induce non-linear modifications (deformations, introduction of asymmetries, etc.) to the frequency spectrum of the pulses IL1. These non-linear effects are detectable by comparing the frequency spectrum of the pulses IL2 with the frequency spectrum of the pulses IL1 input into the amplifying optical fiber 229. These non-linear effects for example include self-phase modulation and stimulated Raman scattering.
[0050] Thus, when the peak power (i.e. the ratio between the energy E and full width at half maximum T.sub.FWHM of the pulse) increases and reaches a threshold, the spectrum of the pulse is broadened via a non-linear self-phase modulation effect. Therefore, the pulse is temporally compressed, i.e. its duration is decreased. The peak power then grows increasingly rapidly, this amplifying the self-phase modulation effect. This allows an amplified pulse IL2 of high energy (>100 nJ) and of small duration with respect to an input pulse IL1 to be obtained.
[0051] In at least one embodiment, the amplifying optical fiber 229 is thus used in a non-linear regime in which the self-phase modulation effect in an abnormal dispersion regime (.sub.2<0, .sub.2 being the dispersion in group velocity expressed in ps.sup.2/m) leads to the obtainment of pulses IL2 that are temporally compressed (for example, to a duration equal to or shorter than half the duration of the pulse IL1) with respect to the pulses IL1 output from the injecting laser oscillator 211. This temporal compression is obtained in the amplifying optical fiber 229 provided that the soliton compression point at which the pulse fissions has not been reached.
[0052] On account of the amplification, the energy of the pulses amplified in the amplifying optical fiber 229 corresponds to a soliton of order N determined by the following formula:
N.sup.2=2E.sub.2T.sub.0n.sub.2/(|.sub.2|.sub.1A.sub.eff) Eq. 1
where E.sub.2 is the energy of the amplified pulse IL2, T.sub.0 the duration of the pulse defined by T.sub.0=T.sub.FWHM/(1+2ln(1+2.sup.1/2)), n.sub.2 the non-linear Kerr index and A.sub.eff the effective modal area of the optical fiber. High-order solitons are unstable and fission into N first-order solitons of lower energy (given by equation 1 setting N=1) because of higher order perturbing effects including stimulated Raman scattering, self-steepening and high orders of chromatic dispersion.
[0053] In at least one embodiment, the length of the amplifying optical fiber 229 is furthermore strictly smaller than the distance of the point of maximum soliton compression so that high-order perturbing effects, which become important when the spectrum of the pulse broadens, do not cause fission of the pulse IL2 in the amplifying fiber 229.
[0054] In at least one embodiment, the amplifying optical fiber 229 of the power amplifier 220 has a very large effective modal area A.sub.eff that is larger than 200 .sub.1.sup.2 and for example larger than 500 m.sup.2 in the case of an erbium-doped fiber. For example, when the amplifying optical fiber 229 is a single-mode fiber, the maximum energy that the amplified laser pulses IL2 are able to attain increases with the effective modal area of the propagation mode of the amplifying optical fiber 229. As the peak power is proportional to energy for a fixed pulse duration, the larger the effective modal area, the higher the peak power of the amplified pulses. In an amplifying fiber of large effective modal area, it is possible to achieve a very high energy before the self-phase modulation effect affects the spectrum of the amplified pulses (for example by broadening, deformation and/or rupture of the symmetry of the frequency spectrum) in a way such that the pulse will be subject to the perturbing effects and to fission. The distance of the soliton compression point thus corresponds to the propagation distance from which these undesirable effects occur. This distance of the soliton compression point thus depends on the effective modal area of the amplifying optical fiber 229 and on the peak power of the pulse input into the amplifying fiber.
[0055] The frequency-shifting device 230 receives the second train of laser pulses IL2 and generates a third train of pulses IL3. More precisely, for each pulse of the second train of laser pulses IL2, a fundamental soliton at a second wavelength .sub.2 strictly longer than the first wavelength .sub.1 is generated by fission of the amplified pulses IL2 then by Raman self-shifting. The energy of the pulses at the wavelength IL2 is given by equation 1 with N=1. The effective modal area of the frequency-shifting fiber 232 is optimized so that the energy of the pulse IL3 is maximal.
[0056] The wavelength .sub.2 of the pulses IL3 is strictly longer than the first wavelength .sub.1 of the second pulses from which they are generated because stimulated Raman scattering, which is the origin of the frequency self-shifting of the solitons in the frequency-shifting fiber 232, has a dissipative effect in terms of light energy. By virtue of the principle of conservation of total energy, the wavelength .sub.2 cannot be shorter than the initial wavelength .sub.1.
[0057] The second wavelength .sub.2 is therefore both dependent on the dopant of the amplifying fiber 229, which determines the first wavelength .sub.1, and on the Raman scattering within the frequency-shifting fiber 232. Raman scattering adds to the wavelength .sub.1 a contribution =.sub.1.sup.2/c f where f is negative and dependent on the Raman susceptibility (see
[0058] The second wavelength .sub.2 is also dependent on the length of the frequency-shifting fiber 232 and on the peak power of the pulse IL2 input into the frequency-shifting fiber 232. The longer the frequency-shifting fiber 232, the larger the frequency shift undergone by the pulse IL2 in this fiber. For a given fiber length, the higher the peak power of the pulse IL2, the larger the frequency shift undergone by the pulse IL2 in this frequency-shifting fiber 232.
[0059] In at least one embodiment, the modal parameters of the frequency-shifting fiber 232, including effective modal area and chromatic dispersion, are configured in order to generate at least one fundamental soliton IL3 (N=1) from a pulse IL2 (with N>1) output from the amplifier while maximizing the peak power of the fundamental soliton IL3. In addition, the length of the fiber 232 is chosen in order to tune the central wavelength of the soliton pulse IL3. According to equation (1), the energy E3 of the soliton pulse IL3 generated in the frequency-shifting fiber 232 will be maximal if the modal area and/or the chromatic dispersion of the fiber are maximized. A high chromatic dispersion contributes to spreading of the pulse and, although it then has a high energy, its peak power is not sufficiently increased. The frequency-shifting fiber 232 therefore has a very large modal area, which may be larger than that of the amplifying optical fiber 229, for example larger than 500 m.sup.2, so as to receive most of the energy of the second laser pulse IL2.
[0060] In at least one embodiment, the amplifying optical fiber 229 is spliced by a splice to the frequency-shifting fiber 232. Any known method for splicing optical fibers may be applied to produce this splice. In particular, electric-arc fusion splicing may be used.
[0061] In at least one embodiment, the amplifying fiber 229 and the frequency-shifting fiber 232 are different, but matched to each other in terms of modal area and/or transverse geometry and/or material so as to avoid the loss of power at the splices between these fibers and thus preserve the energy of the pulse input into the frequency-shifting fiber 232. The optimization of a splice between asymmetric fibers is described in more detail for example in the work entitled Single-mode fiber optics by Luc Jeunhomme, chapter 3, page 99, Marcel Dekker publishing, New York (1983) ISBN 0-8247-7020-X.
[0062] In at least one embodiment, the amplifying fiber 229 and the frequency-shifting fiber 232 are different and asymmetric in terms of modal area, core diameter, core-cladding index difference and/or outside diameter. The energy efficiency of the splice between these two asymmetric optical fibers is in this case optimized by producing an adiabatic taper, i.e. a taper that produces no energy losses. An adiabatic taper is produced by tapering locally the fiber of largest core in order to match the modal areas of the two fibers to be spliced.
[0063] In at least one embodiment, the amplifying optical fiber 229 is tapered over all or some of its length in order to significantly increase the diameter of the core (for example in a ratio of 1 to 3 or more between the start and end of the tapered fiber), and thus to significantly increase the energy that the pulse IL2 is able to convey in comparison to a fiber the core diameter of which is constant along its length (translation-invariant).
[0064] In at least one embodiment, the frequency-shifting fiber 232 is a tapered fiber the geometric extent of the entrance of which is matched to that of the exit of the amplifying fiber 229.
[0065]
[0066] The laser source 200B shown in
[0067] The optical fiber 212 output from the injecting laser oscillator 211 conveys the laser pulses IL1 to the power amplifier 220.
[0068] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0069] The entrance optical fiber 227 receives via the optical fiber 212 the laser pulses IL1 generated by the injecting laser oscillator 211.
[0070] The pumping lasers 222 are chosen depending on the wavelength of the spatial multimode infrared radiation that these pumping lasers 222 produce, this wavelength being suitable for producing a population inversion in the rare-earth ions and thus, according to the principle of stimulated emission, for allowing the amplification of the laser pulses IL1. For example, in the case where the rare-earth ion is erbium, the wavelength of the radiation output from the pumping laser may be 979 +/3 nm or 1532 +/3 nm.
[0071] The multimode pump combiner 223 is suitable for combining in the double-clad single-mode fiber 228 the radiation output from the pumping lasers 222 and the laser pulses IL1 output from the exit fiber 212 of the injecting laser oscillator 211. A continuous background is thus added to the pulses IL1. These pre-amplified pulses IL1 are transmitted via the optical fiber 228 to the amplifying fiber 229. In an identical way to the one described with reference to
[0072] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0073] The cladding light stripper 231 is configured to remove any residual parasitic radiation output from the pumping lasers 222 and not absorbed in the amplifying fiber 229. The filter 234 is a high-pass filter configured to remove, from the optical wave produced by the frequency-shifting fiber 232, residues of the pulse IL2 at the first wavelength .sub.1. The collimator 233 serves to collimate the output optical wave onto the filter 234.
[0074] The exit optical component 240 comprises one or more mirrors 241, 242 for conveying through free space the optical pulses output from the filter 234 to the microscope 250.
[0075] The optical fiber 228 is for example spliced by a splice 224 to the amplifying optical fiber 229. The amplifying optical fiber 229 is also spliced by a splice 225 to the frequency-shifting fiber 232. Any known method for splicing optical fibers may be applied to produce this splice. In particular, electric-arc fusion splicing may be used.
[0076] In at least one embodiment of the laser source 200A or 200B, the injecting laser oscillator 211 is an oscillator that comprises, in addition to the doped internal amplifying fiber described with reference to
[0077] In the case of an oscillator based on fibers with chromatic dispersion management, the length of the amplifying fiber 229 may be chosen so that there is therein a temporal compression of the pulses by compensation of the frequency dispersion of the pulses IL1 that is due, on the one hand, to the abnormal chromatic dispersion of the amplifying fiber 229 and, on the other hand, to the self-phase modulation due to the Kerr effect.
[0078] In at least one embodiment of the laser source 200A or 200B, the oscillator generates solitons of hyperbolic secant temporal and spectral shape. These solitons are at the Fourier limit (i.e. transform-limited) and characterized by T.sub.FWHM=0.31, i.e. they are the briefest pulses that it is possible to generate with a given spectral intensity profile and they cannot be compressed to a shorter duration than their initial duration.
[0079] In at least one embodiment of the laser source 200A or 200B, the injecting laser oscillator 211 is an oscillator that generates pulses that are not frequency chirped, and for example is a soliton oscillator that generates solitons. In at least one embodiment, this soliton oscillator is followed by a normal-dispersion optical fiber that temporally stretches the pulses generated by the injecting laser oscillator 211 to a picosecond duration. This assembly produces frequency-chirped pulses similar to those output from an oscillator with chromatic dispersion management.
[0080] In at least one embodiment of the laser source 200A or 200B, the frequency-shifting fiber 232 is a fiber that is selectively absorbent so as to absorb, in the optical wave produced in the frequency-shifting fiber 232, pulse residues at the first wavelength .sub.1. In the case of the laser source 200B, the high-pass filter 234 and the collimator 233 may be removed.
[0081] The way in which the length of the amplifying fiber 229 is chosen is illustrated by
[0082]
[0083] The graph of
[0084]
[0085] The Raman self-shifting effect is illustrated by
[0086]
[0087] During this process of Raman self-scattering, the quantum defect contributes to a decrease in the peak power of the pulse, as observed in
[0088]
[0089]
[0090]
[0091] The present description also relates to an imaging system comprising a laser system according to any one of the embodiments described in this document, and to a microscope for forming and acquiring an image, using a multi-photon microscopy technique, from ultra-brief pulses produced by means of a laser source according to the present description. The pulses are sent to a zone to be imaged. This zone to be imaged is for example a biological tissue. The pulses cause at a given depth in the biological tissue an excitation of the molecules. An optical beam emitted in response by the zone to be imaged is detected within the microscope. An image may be acquired from the detected optical beam.
[0092]
[0093] Other biological imaging applications may be envisioned. For example an entirely fiber-based laser source according to the present description emitting at a wavelength comprised between 900 and 950 nm may be used for two-photon microscopy when a green fluorescent protein is used as marker. This source will possibly be constructed with neodymium-doped amplifying optical fibers.
[0094] Other applications of an entirely fiber-based laser source according to the present description are envisionable when thulium or holmium are used as the rare earth. The radiation IL1 will be obtained at a wavelength of 1.9 to 2.1 m whereas the radiation at IL2 will have a wavelength longer than 2.1 m. The ultra-brief pulses of high peak power obtained according to the invention will possibly be used to generate ultra-brief secondary radiation in the UV spectral domain via generation of high-order harmonics.
[0095] An entirely fiber-based laser source according to the invention may also be used to generate, via frequency doubling in a suitable non-linear crystal, femtosecond pulses at a wavelength of half of that output from the laser according to the present description. For example if the dopant is holmium, the wavelength of the pulses IL1 and IL2 will be close to 2150 nm whereas the wavelength of the pulses IL3 output from the frequency-shifting fiber will possibly be comprised between 2200 and 2600 nm. By frequency doubling in a suitable non-linear crystal, the wavelength of the pulses will possibly be divided by two and reach the range between 1100 and 1300 nm, which is not currently covered by femtosecond high-peak-power fiber lasers. The high-peak-power pulses thus generated will possibly be used in biological imaging applications implementing THG and 3PEF.