Soliton and Four-Wave Mixing Effects Induced by the Third-Order Dispersion in a Photonic Crystal Fiber with Femtosecond Pulses Pumping at Normal-Dispersion Regime

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Abstract

With the homemade solid-core silica-based photonic crystal fiber (PCF), we observe the generation of soliton and four-wave mixing (FWM) when the femtosecond pulse is pumped at 0.822 μm, belonging to the normal-dispersion regime. It is generally acknowledged that FWM is unrelated to third-order dispersion, whereas we use the fourth-order Runge-Kutta method to simulate the PCF properties by taking into account the third-order dispersion or not; the result we got is different from the conventional one. The numerical simulations are greatly consistent with the experiment results, and the FWM is dominated by negative fourth-order and negative sixth-order dispersion in the experiment. The main dynamic process is explained as the soliton, and the FWM generation can be induced by third-order dispersion. We indicate that low Raman threshold has played a very active role in this process, and we propose a conception of stimulated FWM effect in this paper.

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APA

Li, J., Li, S., Zhao, Y., Li, H., Zhou, G., Chen, H., … An, G. (2015). Soliton and Four-Wave Mixing Effects Induced by the Third-Order Dispersion in a Photonic Crystal Fiber with Femtosecond Pulses Pumping at Normal-Dispersion Regime. IEEE Photonics Journal, 7(5). https://doi.org/10.1109/JPHOT.2015.2468673

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