Stably accessing octave-spanning microresonator frequency combs in the soliton regime
Qing Li, Travis C. Briles, Daron A. Westly, Tara E. Drake, Jordan R., Stone, B. Robert Ilic, Scott A. Diddams, Scott B. Papp, and Kartik Srinivasan

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates stable access to octave-spanning microresonator frequency combs in the soliton regime using simple pump tuning, supported by a new thermal stability model that aligns with experiments and simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified two-step analysis for thermally stable soliton generation without fast pump control, applicable to Si3N4 microresonators.
Findings
Octave-spanning soliton combs achieved in Si3N4 microresonators.
Stable soliton states accessed with slow pump tuning.
Thermal properties critical for stable soliton generation identified.
Abstract
Microresonator frequency combs can be an enabling technology for optical frequency synthesis and timekeeping in low size, weight, and power architectures. Such systems require comb operation in low-noise, phase-coherent states such as solitons, with broad spectral bandwidths (e.g., octave-spanning) for self-referencing to detect the carrier-envelope offset frequency. However, stably accessing such states is complicated by thermo-optic dispersion. For example, in the Si3N4 platform, precisely dispersion-engineered structures can support broadband operation, but microsecond thermal time constants have necessitated fast pump power or frequency control to stabilize the solitons. In contrast, here we consider how broadband soliton states can be accessed with simple pump laser frequency tuning, at a rate much slower than the thermal dynamics. We demonstrate octave-spanning soliton frequency…
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