4.7 Article

Near- and middle-ultraviolet reconfigurable Raman source using a record-low UV/visible transmission loss inhibited-coupling hollow-core fiber

Journal

OPTICS AND LASER TECHNOLOGY
Volume 147, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.optlastec.2021.107678

Keywords

Hollow-core fibers; Photonic-crystal fibers; UV sources; Raman comb

Funding

  1. PIA program (grant 4F)

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Two types of Raman laser sources emitting in near and middle ultraviolet spectral ranges have been developed using a solarization-resilient gas-filled HCPCF with record low transmission loss. The sources offer new opportunities for ozone detection and monitoring with a very small footprint and solarization-free design.
We report on two types of Raman laser sources emitting in the near and middle ultraviolet spectral ranges by the use of a solarization-resilient gas-filled inhibited-coupling (IC) hollow-core photonic-crystal fiber (HCPCF) with record low transmission loss (minimum of 5 dB/km at 480 nm). The first source type emits a Raman comb generated in a hydrogen-filled HCPCF pumped by a 355 nm wavelength microchip nanosecond pulsed laser. The generated comb lines span from 270 nm to the near-infrared region with no less than 20 lines in the 270-400 nm wavelength range. The second type stands for the first dual-wavelength Raman source tuned to the ozone ab-sorption band in the ultraviolet. Such dual-wavelength source emits at either 266 nm and 289 nm, or 266 nm and 299 nm. The relative power of the pair components is set to optimize the sensitivity of ozone detection in dif-ferential absorption lidar (DIAL). The source's physical package represents more than 10-fold size-reduction relative to current DIAL lasers, thus opening new opportunities in on-field ozone monitoring and mapping. Both Raman sources exhibit a very small footprint and are solarization-free.

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