4.7 Article

One-dimensional, surface emitting, disordered Terahertz lasers

Journal

APL PHOTONICS
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.5131253

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union ERC Consolidator Grant SPRINT [681379]

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Quantum cascade lasers are, by far, the most compact, powerful, and spectrally pure sources of radiation at terahertz frequencies, and, as such, they are of crucial importance for applications in metrology, spectroscopy, imaging, and astronomy, among many others. However, for many of those applications, particularly imaging, tomography, and near-field microscopy, undesired artifacts, resulting from the use of a coherent radiation source, can be detrimental. Random lasers can offer a concrete technological solution to the above issue. They, indeed, maintain a high degree of temporal coherence, as traditional lasers, while only exhibiting low spatial coherence, which can allow for the prevention of coherent artifacts, such as speckles. In this study, we report on the development of one-dimensional THz-frequency random wire lasers, patterned on the top surface of a double-metal quantum cascade laser with fully randomly arranged apertures, not arising from the perturbation of a regular photonic structure. By performing finite element method simulations, we engineer photonic patterns supporting strongly localized random modes in the 3.05-3.5 THz range. Multimode laser emission over a tunable-by-design band of about 400 GHz and with similar to 2 mW of peak power has been achieved, associated with 10 degrees divergent optical beam patterns. The achieved performances were then compared with those of perturbed Fabry-Perot disordered lasers, showing continuous-wave operation in the 3.5-3.8 THz range with an order of magnitude larger average power output than their random counterpart, and an irregular far field emission profile.

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