modulation depth
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2022 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
pp. 107686
Author(s):  
Shuang Chen ◽  
Yachen Gao ◽  
Ruipeng Niu ◽  
Wenfa Zhou ◽  
Yuxiao Wang ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daewon Kang ◽  
Sourav Sarkar ◽  
Kyung-Soo Kim ◽  
Soohyun Kim

AbstractThin-film saturable absorbers (SAs) are extensively used in mode-locked fiber laser due to the robust and simple application methods that arise because SAs are alignment-free and self-standing. Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are the most suitable low dimensional material uesd for SAs because of their high nonlinearity and the wavelength control of absorption based on tube diameters. The most challenging problem with the use of CNT-based thin film SAs is thermal damage caused during high power laser operation, which mainly occurs due to aggregation of CNTs. We have demonstrated improved thermal damage resistance and enhanced durability of a film-type SA based on functionalization of SWCNTs, which were subjected to a mechanical functionalization procedure to induce covalent structural modifications on the SWCNT surface. Increased intertube distance was shown by X-ray diffraction, and partial functionalization was shown by Raman spectroscopy. This physical change had a profound effect on integration with the host polymer and resolved aggregation problems. A free-standing SA was fabricated by the drop casting method, and improved uniformity was shown by scanning electron microscopy. The SA was analyzed using various structural and thermal evaluation techniques (Raman spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, etc.). Damage tests at different optical powers were also performed. To the best of our knowledge, a comprehensive analysis of a film-type SA is reported here for the first time. The partially functionalized SWCNT (fSWCNT) SA shows significant structural integrity after intense damage tests and a modulation depth of 25.3%. In passively mode-locked laser operation, a pulse width of 152 fs is obtained with a repetition rate of 77.8 MHz and a signal-to-noise ratio of  75 dB. Stable operation of the femtosecond fiber laser over 200 h verifies the enhanced durability of the fSWCNT SA.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lidwien C.E. Veugen ◽  
A. John Van Opstal ◽  
Marc M. van Wanrooij

We tested whether joint spectrotemporal sensitivity follows from spectrotemporal separability for normal-hearing conditions and for impaired-hearing simulations. In a manual reaction-time task, normal-hearing listeners had to detect the onset of a ripple (with density between 0-8 cycles/octave and a fixed modulation depth of 50%), that moved up or down the log-frequency axis at constant velocity (between 0-64 Hz), in an otherwise-unmodulated broadband white-noise. Spectral and temporal modulations elicited band-pass filtered sensitivity characteristics, with fastest detection rates around 1 cycle/oct and 32 Hz for normal-hearing conditions. These results closely resemble data from other studies that typically used the modulation-depth threshold as a sensitivity measure for spectral-temporal modulations. To simulate hearing-impairment, stimuli were processed with a 6-channel cochlear-implant vocoder, and a hearing-aid simulation that introduced spectral smearing and low-pass filtering. Reaction times were always much slower compared to normal hearing, especially for the highest spectral densities. Binaural performance was predicted well by the benchmark race model of statistical facilitation of independent monaural channels. For the impaired-hearing simulations this implied a "best-of-both-worlds" principle in which the listeners relied on the hearing-aid ear to detect spectral modulations, and on the cochlear-implant ear for temporal-modulation detection. Although singular-value decomposition indicated that the joint spectrotemporal sensitivity matrix could be largely reconstructed from independent temporal and spectral sensitivity functions, in line with time-spectrum separability, a significant inseparable spectral-temporal interaction was present in all hearing conditions. These results imply that the reaction-time task yields a solid and effective objective measure of acoustic spectrotemporal modulation sensitivity, which may also be applicable to hearing-impaired individuals.


Author(s):  
Erkang Li ◽  
Man Jiang ◽  
Duidui Li ◽  
Ruiduo Wang ◽  
Xin Kang ◽  
...  

Abstract Inspired by recent advancements of graphene-based ultrafast photonic devices, as a graphene-like two-dimensional layer-structure material, Ti3C2Tx-MXene has gained much interest in nonlinear optical applications, especially in all-optical intensity modulation. Herein, we successfully fabricated an all-optical modulator based on Ti3C2Tx-Mxene/polyvinyl-alcohol film with nanosecond-scale response time, modulation speed of 100 kHz, and modulation depth of 10%. Furthermore, the variation of fall edges of modulated signal pulse attributing to thermo-optic effect under different pump power was also observed. Considering the ease of fabrication, low cost, ease integration, the proposed novel modulator may open the door for highspeed all-optical communications and signal processing.


Author(s):  
Yuhui Li ◽  
Yiping Xu ◽  
Jiabao Jiang ◽  
Liyong Ren ◽  
Shubo Cheng ◽  
...  

Abstract A monolayer graphene metamaterial composed of a graphene block and four graphene strips, which has the metal-like properties in terahertz frequency range, is proposed to generate an outstanding quadruple plasmon-induced transparency (PIT). Additional analyses show that the forming physical mechanism of the PIT with four transparency windows can be explained by strong destructive interference between the bright mode and the dark mode, and the distributions of electric field intensity and electric field vectors under the irradiation of the incident light. Coupled mode theory (CMT) and finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method are employed to study the spectral response characteristics of the proposed structure, and the theoretical and simulated results are in good agreement. It is found that a tunable multi-frequency switch and excellent optical storage can be achieved in the wide PIT window. The maximum modulation depth is up to 99.7%, which corresponds to the maximum extinction ratio of 25.04 dB and the minimum insertion loss of 0.19 dB. In addition, the time delay is as high as 0.919 ps, the corresponding group refractive index is up to 2755. Thus, the proposed structure provides a new method for the design of terahertz multi-frequency switches and slow light devices.


Author(s):  
Yangyu Liu ◽  
Xue Cao ◽  
AnHua Xian ◽  
Guangmiao Liu ◽  
Wei zhou ◽  
...  

Abstract We demonstrate stable continuous-wave mode-locking (CWML) pulses around 1645nm by employing the home-made Er:YAG ceramic. By using a fiber laser and semiconductor saturable absorber mirror (SESAM) with modulation depth of 1.2%, we get ML pulses with the output average power up to 815 mW, the pulse width shortened as ~4 ps, and the peak power of 1.8 kW. With the SESAM of modulation depth of 2.4%, the second-order harmonic ML pulses were also obtained. As far as we know, this is the first report of CWML from Er3+-doped ceramics and also the shortest pulse duration in Er3+-doped solid-state oscillators.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qin Wei ◽  
Xile Han ◽  
Huanian Zhang ◽  
Chonghui Li ◽  
Chao Zhang ◽  
...  

The output power in ultrafast fiber lasers is usually limited due to the lack of a versatile saturable absorber with high damage threshold and large modulation depth. Here we proposed a more efficient strategy to improve the output energy of erbium-doped fiber laser based on indium selenide (In2Se3) prepared by using the physical vapor deposition (PVD) method. Finally, stable mode-locked bright pulses and triple-wavelength dark–bright pulse pair generation were obtained successfully by adjusting the polarization state. The average output power and pulse energy were 172.4 mW/101 nJ and 171.3 mW/100 nJ, which are significantly improved compared with the previous work. These data demonstrate that the PVD-In2Se3 can be a feasible nonlinear photonic material for high-power fiber lasers, which will pave a fresh avenue for the high-power fiber laser.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
Stefan Rung ◽  
Ralf Hellmann

We report on structuring copper representing soldering pads of printed circuit boards by laser-induced periodic surface structures. Femtosecond laser radiation is used to generate low spatial frequency laser-induced surface structures, having a spatial period of 992 nm and a modulation depth of 120 nm, respectively. The slump of screen-printed solder paste is measured to compare the solder coverage on the pads after the solder process on a hot plate. A comparative study of the coverage of solder paste on a fresh polished pad, a pad stored for two weeks, and femtosecond laser-structured pads reveals the improved wettability of structured pads even after storage. In addition, leaded and lead-free solder pads are compared with the particular advantages of the solder-free pad when periodically laser structured. Our findings are attributed to two major effects: namely, the increase of the surface area and the improved surface chemical wettability. Overall, the application of laser-induced periodic surface structures helps to reduce the demand of lead-based solder in the electronic industry and provides a feasible method for a fast and spatial selective way of surface functionalization.


Author(s):  
Tanmay Bhowmik ◽  
Debabrata Sikdar

Abstract Electro–optical modulation, where a radio frequency signal can be encoded in an optical field, is crucial to decide the overall performance of an integrated photonics system. Due to the growing internet penetration rate worldwide, polarization-division-multiplexing (PDM) technique has emerged to increase the link capacity, where polarization-independent modulators are desirable to reduce system complexity. In this study, we propose a novel parallel directional coupler based dual-polarization electro-absorption modulator based on epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) material. The proposed design is capable of independent and synchronized modulation of two fundamental modes viz. transverse magnetic (TM) and transverse electric (TE) mode of a standard silicon rib waveguide. Indium-tin-oxide (ITO)–Silicon based two parallel hybrid plasmonic waveguides (HPW1 and HPW2) are placed such that fundamental TM (TE) mode of the input bus waveguide can be coupled to HPW1 (HPW2). The ENZ-state of ITO, acquired upon two independent electrical gating, enables large modulation depth by utilizing enhancement of electric field at the absorptive carrier accumulation layer. With a 27 μm active length, the extinction ratio (ER) of the proposed design is 10.11 dB (9.66 dB) for TM (TE) modulation at 1550 nm wavelength. This results in a 0.45 dB ER-discrepancy and indicates the polarization-insensitive nature of the modulator. The insertion losses and modulation bandwidths of our design are less than 1 dB and more than 100 GHz, respectively, for both polarizations over the entire C-band of wavelength. The proposed design can find potential applications in the PDM-enabled integrated photonics systems and high speed optical interconnections at data center networks.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (24) ◽  
pp. 11730
Author(s):  
Binbin Zhao ◽  
Yibo Peng ◽  
Xingguang Wang ◽  
Cheng Wang

Quantum cascade lasers subject to tilted optical feedback produce periodic oscillations, quasi-periodic oscillations, and low-frequency oscillations. This work presents the modulation characteristics of period-one (P1) oscillations in a quantum cascade laser with tilted optical feedback. The electrical signal at the oscillation frequency is more than 50 dB higher than the noise level, and the electrical linewidth is less than 2.0 kHz. This electrical linewidth is about four orders of magnitude narrower than the optical linewidth (around 16 MHz) of the free-running laser, which suggests that the optical sidebands induced by the P1 oscillations are highly coherent with the main optical mode. In addition, the modulation depth of the optical signal is found to be in the range of 1% to 3.5%. In addition, it is verified in the simulations that the P1 oscillations induce not only amplitude modulation but also frequency modulation due to the phase-amplitude coupling effect.


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