Soliton Microcomb Generation in a III-V Photonic Crystal Cavity
Alberto Nardi, Alisa Davydova, Nikolai Kuznetsov, Miles H. Anderson,, Charles M\"ohl, Johann Riemensberger, Paul Seidler, Tobias J. Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates soliton microcomb generation in a gallium phosphide photonic crystal cavity using chirped mirrors to achieve anomalous dispersion, enabling stable Kerr frequency combs with ultrashort pulses.
Contribution
It introduces a novel high-index contrast photonic crystal cavity with chirped mirrors for soliton microcomb generation, overcoming silicon nitride limitations.
Findings
Achieved stable dissipative Kerr frequency combs in gallium phosphide cavity.
Demonstrated soliton pulses with 60 fs duration and 3.0 THz bandwidth.
Used chirped photonic crystal mirrors to engineer anomalous dispersion.
Abstract
Photonic crystals, material structures in which the dielectric function varies periodically in one, two, or three dimensions, can provide exquisite control over the propagation and confinement of light. By tailoring their band structure, exceptional optical effects can be achieved, such as slow light propagation or, through the creation of photonic bandgaps, optical cavities with both a high quality factor and a small mode volume. Photonic crystal cavities have been used to realize compact nano-lasers and achieve strong coupling to quantum emitters, such as semiconductor quantum dots, color centers, or cold atoms. A useful attribute of photonic crystals is the ability to create chirped mirrors. Chirping has underpinned advances in ultra-fast lasers based on bulk mirrors, but has yet to be fully exploited in integrated photonics, where it could provide a means to engineer otherwise…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Photonic and Optical Devices · Photonic Crystals and Applications
