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Here, we demonstrate for the first-time femtosecond pulse amplification on an integrated photonic chip. Our approach translates the concept of chirped pulse amplification to the chip level. Specifically, we leverage tailored all-normal dispersion, large mode-area gain waveguides to realize a low-nonlinearity, high-gain, short-length optical amplifier in which pulse propagation is dominated by dispersion. We show more than 17dB amplification of ultrashort pulses from a 1 GHz femtosecond source at center wavelength of 1815 nm. The amplified pulses have an on-chip output pulse peak power of 800 W with a pulse duration of 116 fs.
Much can be gained by improving the intrinsically low efficiency of the down-conversion process while still resorting to existing state-of-the-art lasers. However, the fundamental Manley-Rowe limit caps the efficiency of parametric downconversion from 1-μm wavelength lasers to sub-THz frequency to the sub-percent range.
We present methods that promise boosting the THz radiation yield obtained via parametric down-conversion beyond the Manley-Rowe limit. Our method relies on cascaded nonlinear three-wave mixing between two spectrally neighboring laser pulses in periodically poled Lithium Niobate. Owing to favorable phase-matching, the down-conversion process avalanches, resulting in spectral broadening in the optical domain. This allows in-situ coherent multiplexing of multiple parametric down-conversion stages within a single device and boosting the efficiency of the process beyond the ManleyRowe limit. We experimentally demonstrated the concept using either broadband, spectrally chirped optical pulses from a Joule-class laser or using two narrowband lasers with neighboring wavelengths. Experimental results are backed by numerical simulations that predict conversion efficiencies from 1 μm to sub-THz radiation in the multi-percent range.
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