A.M. Heidt
University of Southampton
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Publication
Featured researches published by A.M. Heidt.
Optics Express | 2013
Z. Li; A.M. Heidt; J. M. O. Daniel; Yongmin Jung; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson
We report the realization of a thulium doped fiber amplifier designed for optical communications providing high gain (>35dB) and low noise figure (<;6dB) over 1910nm-2020nm with a maximum saturated output power of more than 1W.
Optics Express | 2013
M.N. Petrovich; Francesco Poletti; J.P. Wooler; A.M. Heidt; Naveen K. Baddela; Z. Li; D. R. Gray; Radan Slavík; Francesca Parmigiani; Natalie V. Wheeler; John R. Hayes; E. Numkam; L. Grüner-Nielsen; Bera Palsdottir; Richard Phelan; Brian Kelly; John O'Carroll; Martin Becker; Naoise MacSuibhne; Jian Zhao; F. C. Garcia Gunning; Andrew D. Ellis; Periklis Petropoulos; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson
The first demonstration of a hollow core photonic bandgap fiber (HC-PBGF) suitable for high-rate data transmission in the 2 µm waveband is presented. The fiber has a record low loss for this wavelength region (4.5 dB/km at 1980 nm) and a >150 nm wide surface-mode-free transmission window at the center of the bandgap. Detailed analysis of the optical modes and their propagation along the fiber, carried out using a time-of-flight technique in conjunction with spatially and spectrally resolved (S2) imaging, provides clear evidence that the HC-PBGF can be operated as quasi-single mode even though it supports up to four mode groups. Through the use of a custom built Thulium doped fiber amplifier with gain bandwidth closely matched to the fibers low loss window, error-free 8 Gbit/s transmission in an optically amplified data channel at 2008 nm over 290 m of 19 cell HC-PBGF is reported.
Optics Express | 2014
Mariusz Klimczak; Bartłomiej Siwicki; Piotr Skibiński; Dariusz Pysz; Ryszard Stepien; A.M. Heidt; Czesław Radzewicz; Ryszard Buczynski
Supercontinuum spanning over an octave from 900 - 2300 nm is reported in an all-normal dispersion, soft glass photonic crystal fiber. The all-solid microstructured fiber was engineered to achieve a normal dispersion profile flattened to within -50 to -30 ps/nm/km in the wavelength range of 1100 - 2700 nm. Under pumping with 75 fs pulses centered at 1550 nm, the recorded spectral flatness is 7 dB in the 930 - 2170 nm range, and significantly less if cladding modes present in the uncoated photonic crystal fiber are removed. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of an octave-spanning, all-normal dispersion supercontinuum generation in a non-silica microstructured fiber, where the spectrum long-wavelength edge is red-shifted to as far as 2300 nm. This is also an important step in moving the concept of ultrafast coherent supercontinuum generation in all-normal dispersion fibers further towards the mid-infrared spectral region.
Optics Express | 2013
A.M. Heidt; J.H.V. Price; Catherine Baskiotis; James S. Feehan; Z. Li; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson
We present the first demonstration of mid-IR supercontinuum generation directly pumped with picosecond pulses from a Thulium fiber-amplified gain-switched laser diode at 2 µm. We achieve more than two octaves of bandwidth from 750 - 4000 nm in step-index ZBLAN fiber with Watt-level average power and spectral flatness of less than 1.5 dB over a 1300 nm range in the mid-IR from 2450 - 3750 nm. The system offers high stability, power-scaling capability to the 10 W regime, and demonstrates an attractive route towards relatively inexpensive, versatile and practical sources of high power broadband mid-IR radiation.
Optics Express | 2013
Z. Li; A.M. Heidt; Nikita Simakov; Yongmin Jung; J. M. O. Daniel; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson
We present the first in-band diode-pumped TDFAs operating in the 2 µm wavelength region and test their suitability as high performance amplifiers in potential future telecommunication networks. We demonstrate amplification over a 240 nm wide window in the range 1810 - 2050 nm with up to 36 dB gain and noise figure as low as 4.5 dB.
Optics Letters | 2013
A.M. Heidt; Z. Li; J.K. Sahu; P.C. Shardlow; Martin Becker; M. Rothhardt; M. Ibsen; Richard Phelan; Brian Kelly; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson
We report on the generation of picosecond pulses at 2 μm directly from a gain-switched discrete-mode diode laser and their amplification in a multistage thulium-doped fiber amplifier chain. The system is capable of operating at repetition rates in the range of 2 MHz-1.5 GHz without change of configuration, delivering high-quality 33 ps pulses with up to 3.5 μJ energy and 100 kW peak power, as well as up to 18 W of average power. These results represent a major technological advance and a 1 order of magnitude increase in peak power and pulse energy compared to existing picosecond sources at 2 μm.
Optics Letters | 2013
Z. Li; Shaif-ul Alam; Yongmin Jung; A.M. Heidt; David J. Richardson
We report a direct diode-pumped all-fiber tunable laser source at 2 μm with a tuning range of more than 250 nm. A 3 dB power flatness of 200 nm with a maximum output power of 30 mW at 1930 nm was achieved. The laser has a high optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) of more than 40 dB across the whole tuning range.
Optics Letters | 2014
Natalie V. Wheeler; A.M. Heidt; Naveen K. Baddela; Eric Numkam Fokoua; John R. Hayes; Seyed Reza Sandoghchi; Francesco Poletti; M.N. Petrovich; David J. Richardson
Hollow-core-photonic-bandgap fiber, fabricated from high-purity synthetic silica, with a wide operating bandwidth between 3.1 and 3.7 μm, is reported. A minimum attenuation of 0.13 dB/m is achieved through a 19-cell core design with a thin core wall surround. The loss is reduced further to 0.05 dB/m following a purging process to remove hydrogen chloride gas from the fiber-representing more than an order of magnitude loss reduction as compared to previously reported bandgap-guiding fibers operating in the mid-infrared. The fiber also offers a low bend sensitivity of <0.25 dB per 5 cm diameter turn over a 300 nm bandwidth. Simulations are in good agreement with the achieved losses and indicate that a further loss reduction of more than a factor of 2 should be possible by enlarging the core using a 37-cell design.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2015
Zhixin Liu; Yong Chen; Zhihong Li; Brian Kelly; Richard Phelan; John O'Carroll; T. Bradley; J.P. Wooler; Natalie V. Wheeler; A.M. Heidt; Thomas Richter; Colja Schubert; Martin Becker; Francesco Poletti; M.N. Petrovich; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson; Radan Slavík
The 2-μm wave band is emerging as a potential new window for optical telecommunications with several distinct advantages over the traditional 1.55 μm region. First of all, the hollow-core photonic band gap fiber (HC-PBGF) is an emerging transmission fiber candidate with ultra-low nonlinearity and lowest latency (0.3% slower than light propagating in vacuum) that has its minimum loss within the 2-μm wavelength band. Second, the thulium-doped fiber amplifier that operates in this spectral region provides significantly more bandwidth than the erbium-doped fiber amplifier. In this paper, we demonstrate a single-channel 2-μm transmitter capable of delivering >52 Gbit/s data signals, which is twice the capacity previously demonstrated. To achieve this, we employ discrete multitone modulation via direct current modulation of a Fabry-Perot semiconductor laser. The 4.4-GHz modulation bandwidth of the laser is enhanced by optical injection locking, providing up to 11 GHz modulation bandwidth. Transmission over 500-m and 3.8-km samples of HC-PBGF is demonstrated.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2014
A.M. Heidt; Zhihong Li; David J. Richardson
We review recent advances in the development of high power short- and ultrashort pulsed Thulium-doped fiber amplifier (TDFA) systems seeded by semiconductor laser diodes at wavelengths around 2 μm. The diode-seeding and the master oscillator power amplifier (MOPA) design allow for the construction of extremely versatile laser systems that can operate over wide ranges of peak power, pulse energy and repetition rate in the ultrashort picosecond to the long nanosecond pulsed regimes. We present a record peak power of 130 kW and pulse energy of 5 μJ in picosecond mode, while demonstrating user-defined pulse-shaping capabilities at millijoule pulse energy levels in the nanosecond regime from essentially the same amplifier system. The system architecture as well as important design and power scaling considerations are discussed in detail. Additionally, we highlight recent results in the application of these MOPA systems and their high performance TDFA stages in such diverse application areas as next generation telecommunication networks, mid-infrared supercontinuum generation and mid-infrared gas detection in hollow-core photonic bandgap fibers.