Development of fiber-based supercontinuum light sources for the biosensor and bio-imaging applications

The current research project is concerned with the development of the fiber-based supercontinuum light sources. Our approach for the generation of such a light is through the nonlinear optical pulse propagation in the special optical fibers such as the photonic crystal fibers. In the project we have...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tang, Dingyuan.
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Research Report
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/47611
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
Description
Summary:The current research project is concerned with the development of the fiber-based supercontinuum light sources. Our approach for the generation of such a light is through the nonlinear optical pulse propagation in the special optical fibers such as the photonic crystal fibers. In the project we have first experimentally investigated the noise-like pulse (NLP) generation in the dispersion-managed fiber laser operating in the anomalous dispersion regime. NLPs with spectral bandwidth of 32.1nm were achieved. Parallel to the experimental studies, we have also theoretically analyzed the physical mechanism of the NLP generation in fiber lasers and firstly pointed out that the NLP emission was caused by the combined effect of soliton collapse and positive cavity feedback in the fiber lasers. Based on our theoretical study on the NLP generation in fiber lasers, we predicted that NLP with superbroad bandwidth could be generated in the conventional fiber lasers without dispersion managed cavity. We then experimentally built up a conventional passively mode-locked fiber laser without dispersion management, and experimentally achieved the high energy NLPs with a superbroad bandwidth of 93nm. In addition, a long cavity dispersion-managed fiber laser was also experimentally studied and NLPs with over 100 nJ pulse energy were also demonstrated. For the long cavity fiber lasers, the stimulated Raman effect becomes important. We therefore theoretically analyzed the role of Raman self-frequency shift effect in the NLP generation over gain effect, and experimentally investigated the difference of NLP generation between the long cavity fiber laser and the short cavity fiber laser, and further obtained NLPs with up to 120 nm bandwidth.