Tightly trapped acoustic phonons in photonic crystal fibres as highly nonlinear artificial Raman oscillators

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Abstract

Interactions between light and hypersonic waves can be enhanced by tight field confinement, as shown in periodically structured materials 1 , microcavities 2 , micromechanical resonators 3 and photonic crystal fibres 4-6 (PCFs). There are many examples of weak sound-light interactions, for example, guided acoustic-wave Brillouin scattering in conventional optical fibres 7 . This forward-scattering effect results from the interaction of core-guided light with acoustic resonances of the entire fibre cross-section, and is viewed as a noise source in quantum-optics experiments 8 . Here, we report the observation of strongly nonlinear forward scattering of laser light by gigahertz acoustic vibrations, tightly trapped together in the small core of a silica-air PCF. Bouncing to and fro across the core at close to 90° to the fibre axis, the acoustic waves form optical-phonon-like modes with a flat dispersion curve and a distinct cutoff frequency Ω a . This ensures automatic phase-matching to the guided optical mode so that, on pumping with a dual-frequency laser source tuned to Ω a , multiple optical side bands are generated, spaced by Ω a . The number of strong side bands in this Raman-like process increases with pump power. The results point to a new class of designable nonlinear optical device with applications in, for example, pulse synthesis, frequency comb generation for telecommunications and fibre laser mode-locking.

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Kang, M. S., Nazarkin, A., Brenn, A., & Russell, P. S. J. (2009). Tightly trapped acoustic phonons in photonic crystal fibres as highly nonlinear artificial Raman oscillators. Nature Physics, 5(4), 276–280. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys1217

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