Graphene-doped polymer nanofibers for low-threshold nonlinear optical waveguiding

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Abstract

Graphene-doped polymer nanofibers are fabricated by taper drawing of solvated polyvinyl alcohol doped with liquid-phase exfoliated graphene flakes. Nanofibers drawn this way typically have diameters measured in hundreds of nanometers and lengths in tens of millimeters; they show excellent uniformity and surface smoothness for optical waveguiding. Owing to their tightly confined waveguiding behavior, light-matter interaction in these subwavelength-diameter nanofibers is significantly enhanced. Using approximately 1350-nm-wavelength femto-second pulses, we demonstrate saturable absorption behavior in these nanofibers with a saturation threshold down to 0.25 pJ pulse -1 (peak power ~1.3 W). Additionally, using 1064-nm-wavelength nanosecond pulses as switching light, we show all-optical modulation of a 1550-nm-wavelength signal light guided along a single nanofiber with a switching peak power of ~3.2 W.

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Meng, C., Yu, S. L., Wang, H. Q., Cao, Y., Tong, L. M., Liu, W. T., & Shen, Y. R. (2015). Graphene-doped polymer nanofibers for low-threshold nonlinear optical waveguiding. Light: Science and Applications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/lsa.2015.121

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