Mid-infrared ultra-high-Q resonators based on fluoride crystalline materials

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Abstract

The unavailability of highly transparent materials in the mid-infrared has been the main limitation in the development of ultra-sensitive molecular sensors or cavity-based spectroscopy applications. Whispering gallery mode microresonators have attained ultra-high-quality (Q) factor resonances in the near-infrared and visible. Here we report ultra-high Q factors in the mid-infrared using polished alkaline earth metal fluoride crystals. Using an uncoated chalcogenide tapered fibre as a high-ideality coupler in the mid-infrared, we study via cavity ringdown technique the losses of BaF2, CaF2, MgF2 and SrF2 microresonators. We show that MgF 2 is limited by multiphonon absorption by studying the temperature dependence of the Q factor. In contrast, in SrF2 and BaF2 the lower multiphonon absorption leads to ultra-high Q factors at 4.5 μm. These values correspond to an optical finesse of F>1×105, the highest value achieved for any type of mid-infrared resonator to date.

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Lecaplain, C., Javerzac-Galy, C., Gorodetsky, M. L., & Kippenberg, T. J. (2016). Mid-infrared ultra-high-Q resonators based on fluoride crystalline materials. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13383

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