Sub-100-fs 1.87 GHz mode-locked fiber laser using stretched-soliton effects
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He, W., M. Pang, C. R. Menyuk, and P. St J. Russell. “Sub-100-Fs 1.87 GHz Mode-Locked Fiber Laser Using Stretched-Soliton Effects.” Optica 3, no. 12 (December 20, 2016): 1366–72. https://doi.org/10.1364/OPTICA.3.001366.
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Abstract
Current pulsed fiber lasers that are capable of delivering stable sub-100-fs pulses at megahertz repetition rates require intracavity pulse energies in the nanojoule range. Scaling these lasers to gigahertz repetition rates necessitates, therefore, very high average power levels and complex cladding-pumped configurations. Here we report a type of stretched-soliton all-fiber laser that generates broadband, soliton-like pulses at 1.55 μm with intracavity pulse energies of only tens of picojoules. In the laser cavity, strong dispersion management leads to a temporal breathing ratio of ~70, while the weak residual anomalous dispersion is perfectly balanced by the low Kerr nonlinearity, resulting in the formation of temporally stretched, hyperbolic-secant pulses. A lumped wavelength-dependent attenuator compensates for the effects of the gain filtering on the pulse spectrum, ensuring intracavity pulse self-consistency. This unique stretched-soliton mechanism, combined with a harmonic mode-locking technique based on intense optoacoustic interactions in solid-core photonic crystal fiber, yields for the first time stable gigahertz-rate, sub-100-fs, dispersive-wave-free pulse trains at moderate pump powers.
