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Dive into the research topics where Alex Rozhin is active.

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Featured researches published by Alex Rozhin.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Photoluminescence spectroscopy of carbon nanotube bundles: evidence for exciton energy transfer.

Ping-Heng Tan; Alex Rozhin; Tawfique Hasan; P. Hu; Vittorio Scardaci; W. I. Milne; A. C. Ferrari

Photoluminescence is commonly used to identify the electronic structure of individual nanotubes. But, nanotubes naturally occur in bundles. Thus, we investigate photoluminescence of nanotube bundles. We show that their complex spectra are simply explained by exciton energy transfer between adjacent tubes, whereby excitation of large gap tubes induces emission from smaller gap ones via Förster interaction between excitons. The consequent relaxation rate is faster than nonradiative recombination, leading to enhanced photoluminescence of acceptor tubes. This fingerprints bundles with different compositions and opens opportunities to optimize them for opto-electronics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

A compact, high power, ultrafast laser mode-locked by carbon nanotubes

Zhipei Sun; Alex Rozhin; Fengqiu Wang; Tawfique Hasan; Daniel Popa; W. O’Neill; A. C. Ferrari

We report ultrafast highly chirped pulses from an erbium doped, nanotube-mode-locked fiber oscillator. We generate 1.6W average power and 11kW peak power by seeding a fiber amplifier. This paves the way to mode-locked all-fiber master oscillator amplifiers as economic and compact sources for high-power applications, such as micromachining and laser surgery.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Polarisation Dynamics of Vector Soliton Molecules in Mode Locked Fibre Laser

Veronika Tsatourian; Sergey Sergeyev; Chengbo Mou; Alex Rozhin; Vitaly Mikhailov; Bryan Rabin; Paul S. Westbrook; Sergei K. Turitsyn

Two fundamental laser physics phenomena - dissipative soliton and polarisation of light are recently merged to the concept of vector dissipative soliton (VDS), viz. train of short pulses with specific state of polarisation (SOP) and shape defined by an interplay between anisotropy, gain/loss, dispersion, and nonlinearity. Emergence of VDSs is both of the fundamental scientific interest and is also a promising technique for control of dynamic SOPs important for numerous applications from nano-optics to high capacity fibre optic communications. Using specially designed and developed fast polarimeter, we present here the first experimental results on SOP evolution of vector soliton molecules with periodic polarisation switching between two and three SOPs and superposition of polarisation switching with SOP precessing. The underlying physics presents an interplay between linear and circular birefringence of a laser cavity along with light induced anisotropy caused by polarisation hole burning.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

320 fs pulse generation from an ultrafast laser inscribed waveguide laser mode-locked by a nanotube saturable absorber

Stephen J. Beecher; Robert R. Thomson; Nicholas D. Psaila; Zhipei Sun; Tawfique Hasan; Alex Rozhin; A. C. Ferrari; Ajoy K. Kar

Ultrafast laser inscription is used to fabricate the gain element for a mode-locked Er-doped bismuthate glass waveguide laser. Mode-locking is initiated and stabilized by the use of a single wall carbon nanotube saturable absorber. The waveguide laser produces 320 fs pulses at 1.56 μm with a pulse repetition rate of 40 MHz and average output power of 1.25 mW.


Optics Express | 2012

Spectrum-, pulsewidth-, and wavelength- switchable all-fiber mode-locked Yb laser with fiber based birefringent filter

Y. S. Fedotov; Sergey Kobtsev; Raz Arif; Alex Rozhin; Chengbo Mou; Sergei K. Turitsyn

We examined methods of controlling the pulse duration, spectral width and wavelength of the output from an all-fiber Yb laser mode-locked by carbon nanotubes. It is shown that a segment of polarization maintaining (PM) fiber inserted into a standard single mode fiber based laser cavity can function as a spectral selective filter. Adjustment of the length of the PM fiber from 1 to 2 m led to a corresponding variation in the pulse duration from 2 to 3.8 ps, the spectral bandwidth of the laser output changes from 0.15 to 1.26 nm. Laser output wavelength detuning within up to 5 nm was demonstrated with a fixed length of the PM fiber by adjustment of the polarization controller.


ChemPhysChem | 2010

Ion interactions with the carbon nanotube surface in aqueous solutions: understanding the molecular mechanisms

Andrey I. Frolov; Alex Rozhin; Maxim V. Fedorov

We study the molecular mechanisms of alkali halide ion interactions with the single-wall carbon nanotube surface in water by means of fully atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. We focus on the basic physical-chemical principles of ion-nanotube interactions in aqueous solutions and discuss them in light of recent experimental findings on selective ion effects on carbon nanotubes.


Laser Physics Letters | 2014

Semiconductor saturable absorber mirror passively Q-switched 2.97 μm fluoride fiber laser

Jianfeng Li; Hongyu Luo; Yulian He; Yongzhi Liu; Lin Zhang; Kaiming Zhou; Alex Rozhin; Sergei K. Turitsyn

A diode-cladding-pumped mid-infrared passively Q-switched Ho3+-doped fluoride fiber laser using a reverse designed broad band semiconductor saturable mirror (SESAM) was demonstrated. Nonlinear reflectivity of the SESAM was measured using an in-house Yb3+-doped mode-locked fiber laser at 1062 nm. Stable pulse train was produced at a slope efficient of 12.1% with respect to the launched pump power. Maximum pulse energy of 6.65 µJ with a pulse width of 1.68 µs and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of ~50 dB was achieved at a repetition rate of 47.6 kHz and center wavelength of 2.971 µm. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first 3 µm region SESAM-based Q-switched fiber laser with the highest average power and pulse energy, as well as the longest wavelength from mid-infrared passively Q-switched fluoride fiber lasers.


Optics Express | 2008

Sub-100 fs pump-probe spectroscopy of Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes with a 100 MHz Er-fiber laser system

Alessio Gambetta; Gianluca Galzerano; Alex Rozhin; A. C. Ferrari; Roberta Ramponi; P. Laporta; Marco Marangoni

An extremely compact and versatile near-infrared two-color femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy apparatus based on an amplified Erfiber laser system is presented and applied to the characterization of the relaxation dynamics of single-wall carbon nanotubes with fundamental absorption in the 2 microm spectral region. By implementing a fast-scan technique, dynamics as long as 3 ps are acquired in 5 s with a relative sensitivity of 10(-4) and a temporal resolution below 100 fs at 2 microm.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2014

Higher-Order Soliton Generation in Hybrid Mode-Locked Thulium-Doped Fiber Ring Laser

Maria Chernysheva; Alexander A. Krylov; Chengbo Mou; Raz Arif; Alex Rozhin; Mark H. Rümmelli; Sergey K. Turitsyn; Evgeny M. Dianov

A thulium-doped all-fiber laser passively mode-locked by the co-action of nonlinear polarization evolution and single-walled carbon nanotubes operating at 1860-1980 nm wavelength band is demonstrated. Pumped with the single-mode laser diode at 1.55 μm laser generates near 500-fs soliton pulses at repetition rate ranging from 6.3 to 72.5 MHz in single-pulse operation regime. Having 3-m long cavity average output power reached 300 mW, giving the peak power of 4.88 kW and the pulse energy of 2.93 nJ with slope efficiency higher than 30%. At a 21.6-m long ring cavity average output power of 117 mW is obtained, corresponding to the pulse energy up to 10.87 nJ and a pulse peak power of 21.7 kW, leading to the higher-order soliton generation.


Optics Express | 2013

Physical characteristics of localized surface plasmons resulting from nano-scale structured multi-layer thin films deposited on D-shaped optical fiber

Thomas D.P. Allsop; Ron Neal; Martin Dvorak; Kyriacos Kalli; Alex Rozhin; David J. Webb

Novel surface plasmonic optical fiber sensors have been fabricated using multiple coatings deposited on a lapped section of a single mode fiber. UV laser irradiation processing with a phase mask produces a nano-scaled surface relief grating structure resembling nano-wires. The resulting individual corrugations produced by material compaction are approximately 20 μm long with an average width at half maximum of 100 nm and generate localized surface plasmons. Experimental data are presented that show changes in the spectral characteristics after UV processing, coupled with an overall increase in the sensitivity of the devices to surrounding refractive index. Evidence is presented that there is an optimum UV dosage (48 joules) over which no significant additional optical change is observed. The devices are characterized with regards to change in refractive index, where significantly high spectral sensitivities in the aqueous index regime are found, ranging up to 4000 nm/RIU for wavelength and 800 dB/RIU for intensity.

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W. I. Milne

University of Cambridge

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I.H. White

University of Cambridge

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Ping-Heng Tan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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