Scientists at EPFL and IBM have developed a new type of laser that could have a significant impact on optical ranging technology. The laser is based on a material called lithium niobate, often used in the field of optical modulators, which controls the frequency or intensity of light that is transmitted through a device.
Lithium niobate is particularly useful because it can handle a lot of optical power and has a high “Pockels coefficient,” which means that it can change its optical properties when an electric field is applied to it.
The researchers achieved their breakthrough by combining lithium niobate with silicon nitride, which allowed them to produce a new type of hybrid integrated tunable laser. To do this, the team manufactured integrated circuits for light (“photonic integrated circuits”) based on silicon nitride at EPFL, and then bonded them with lithium niobate wafers at IBM.
The approach produced a laser with low frequency noise (a measure of how stable the laser’s frequency is) and simultaneously with fast wavelength tuning—both great qualities for a laser used in light detection and ranging (LiDAR) applications. Then they performed an optical ranging experiment where they used the laser to measure distances with high precision.
Beyond integrated lasers, the hybrid platform has the potential to realize integrated transceivers for telecommunications as well as microwave-optical transducers for use in quantum computing.
“What is remarkable about the result is that the laser simultaneously provides low phase noise and fast petahertz-per-second tuning, something that has never before been achieved with such a chip-scale integrated laser,” says Professor Tobias J. Kippenberg, who led the EPFL side of the project.
The work is published in the journal Nature.
More information:
Tobias Kippenberg, Ultrafast tunable lasers using lithium niobate integrated photonics, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05724-2. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05724-2
Provided by
Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
Citation:
Scientists develop new lithium niobate laser technology (2023, March 15)