4.7 Article

Pure Temporal Dispersion for Aberration Free Ultrafast Time-Stretch Applications

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 17, Pages 5589-5597

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2021.3085106

Keywords

Optical fiber dispersion; Optical fibers; Delays; Optical fiber communication; Bandwidth; Optical distortion; Ultrafast optics; Dispersion; parametric mixing; space-time duality; spectrum analysis; ultrafast imaging; ultrafast measurement

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Project [2019YFB2203102]
  2. National Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [61927817, 61735006, 61631166003, 61675081, 62005090, 61505060]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2018M640692]

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This paper introduces an optical phase conjugation-based scheme to compensate for third-order dispersion, achieving large temporal dispersion and high-resolution optical imaging. Leveraging pure temporal dispersion, it eliminates temporal aberrations and achieves a record number of optical resolvable points with nondegraded resolution over a wide bandwidth.
Photonic time-stretch applications overcome the speed limitations of conventional digitizers and enable the observation of nonrepetitive and statistically rare phenomena that occur on short timescales. In most time-stretch applications, large temporal dispersion with large bandwidth is highly desired to satisfy the far-field diffraction regime. However, most conventional spatial dispersers or chirped fiber Bragg gratings are constrained by their spatial volume, which can be overcome by using ultra-low-loss dispersive fibers, an ideal medium for large temporal dispersion (beta(2)), but they suffer from third-order dispersion (beta(3)) and aberrations. In this paper, an optical phase conjugation-based, third-order dispersion compensation scheme was introduced, with accumulated beta(2) and eliminated beta(3), and it achieved a +/- 3400-ps(2) pure temporal dispersion of over 30-nm bandwidth. Leveraging this pure temporal dispersion, up to 2% of temporal aberrations were eliminated. Furthermore, Fourier domain spectroscopy achieved a record 15000 optical effective resolvable points, with a nondegraded 2-pm resolution over a 30-nm range.

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