Mid-Infrared ultra-high-Q resonators based on fluoride crystalline materials
C. Lecaplain, C. Javerzac-Galy, M.L. Gorodetsky, T.J. Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first ultra-high-Q mid-infrared crystalline microresonators using fluoride crystals, achieving record finesse and opening new avenues for sensitive molecular spectroscopy and mid-IR laser stabilization.
Contribution
It reports the first observation of ultra-high Q factors in mid-IR fluoride crystalline microresonators, reaching over 1.4×10^8, significantly surpassing previous mid-IR resonator performance.
Findings
Achieved Q factors >1.4×10^8 at 4.4 μm in fluoride crystals.
Recorded the highest finesse (>4×10^4) for mid-IR resonators.
Demonstrated potential for narrow linewidth QCL stabilization and Kerr comb generation.
Abstract
Decades ago, the losses of glasses in the near infrared (near-IR) were investigated in views of developments for optical telecommunications. Today, properties in the mid-infrared (mid-IR) are of interest for molecular spectroscopy applications. In particular, high-sensitivity spectroscopic techniques based on high-finesse mid-IR cavities hold high promise for medical applications. Due to exceptional purity and low losses, whispering gallery mode microresonators based on polished alkaline earth metal fluoride crystals (i.e the family, where X Ca, Mg, Ba, Sr,...) have attained ultra-high quality (Q) factor resonances (Q10) in the near-IR and visible spectral ranges. Here we report for the first time ultra-high Q factors in the mid-IR using crystalline microresonators. Using an uncoated chalcogenide (ChG) tapered fiber, light from a continuous wave quantum…
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