Abstract
The quantum cascade laser has evolved to be a compact, powerful source of coherent mid-infrared light; however, its fast gain dynamics strongly restricts the formation of ultrashort pulses. As such, the shortest pulses reported so far were limited to a few picoseconds with some hundreds of milliwatts of peak power, strongly narrowing their applicability for time-resolved and nonlinear experiments. Here we demonstrate an approach capable of producing near-transform-limited subpicosecond pulses with several watts of peak power. Starting from a frequency-modulated phase-locked state, ultrashort high-peak-power pulses are generated via spectral filtering, gain modulation-induced spectral broadening and external pulse compression. We assess their temporal nature by means of a novel asynchronous sampling method, coherent beat note interferometry and interferometric autocorrelation. These results open new pathways for nonlinear physics in the mid-infrared.
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CITATION STYLE
Täschler, P., Bertrand, M., Schneider, B., Singleton, M., Jouy, P., Kapsalidis, F., … Faist, J. (2021). Femtosecond pulses from a mid-infrared quantum cascade laser. Nature Photonics, 15(12), 919–924. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-021-00894-9
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