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Dive into the research topics where Daniel E. Leaird is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel E. Leaird.


Optics Express | 2015

Deterministic single soliton generation and compression in microring resonators avoiding the chaotic region.

Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Xiaoxiao Xue; Pei-Hsun Wang; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

A path within the parameter space of detuning and pump power is demonstrated in order to obtain a single cavity soliton (CS) with certainty in SiN microring resonators in the anomalous dispersion regime. Once the single CS state is reached, it is possible to continue a path to compress it, broadening the corresponding single free spectral range (FSR) Kerr frequency comb. The first step to achieve this goal is to identify the stable regions in the parameter space via numerical simulations of the Lugiato-Lefever equation (LLE). Later, using this identification, we define a path from the stable modulation instability (SMI) region to the stable cavity solitons (SCS) region avoiding the chaotic and unstable regions.


Nature Communications | 2017

Dispersion engineering and frequency comb generation in thin silicon nitride concentric microresonators

Sangsik Kim; Kyunghun Han; Cong Wang; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Xiaoxiao Xue; Chengying Bao; Yi Xuan; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner; Minghao Qi

Kerr nonlinearity-based frequency combs and solitons have been generated from on-chip microresonators. The initiation of the combs requires global or local anomalous dispersion which leads to many limitations, such as material choice, film thickness, and spectral ranges where combs can be generated, as well as fabrication challenges. Using a concentric racetrack-shaped resonator, we show that such constraints can be lifted and resonator dispersion can be engineered to be anomalous over moderately broad bandwidth. We demonstrate anomalous dispersion in a 300 nm thick silicon nitride film, suitable for semiconductor manufacturing but previously thought to result in waveguides with high normal dispersion. Together with a mode-selective, tapered coupling scheme, we generate coherent mode-locked frequency combs. Our method can realize anomalous dispersion for resonators at almost any wavelength and simultaneously achieve material and process compatibility with semiconductor manufacturing.Kerr frequency comb generation from microresonators requires anomalous dispersion, imposing restrictions on materials and resonator design. Here, Kim et al. propose a concentric racetrack-resonator design where the dispersion can be engineered to be anomalous via resonant mode coupling.Kerr nonlinearity based frequency combs and solitons have been generated from on-chip optical microresonators with high quality factors and global or local anomalous dispersion. However, fabrication of such resonators usually requires materials and/or processes that are not standard in semiconductor manufacturing facilities. Moreover, in certain frequency regimes such as visible and ultra-violet, the large normal material dispersion makes it extremely difficult to achieve anomalous dispersion. Here we present a concentric racetrack-shaped resonator that achieves anomalous dispersion in a 300 nm thick silicon nitride film, suitable for semiconductor manufacturing but previously thought to result only in waveguides with high normal dispersion, a high intrinsic Q of 1.5 million, and a novel mode-selective coupling scheme that allows coherent combs to be generated. We also provide evidence suggestive of soliton-like pulse formation in the generated comb. Our method can achieve anomalous dispersion over moderately broad bandwidth for resonators at almost any wavelength while still maintaining material and process compatibility with high-volume semiconductor manufacturing.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017

Persistent energy–time entanglement covering multiple resonances of an on-chip biphoton frequency comb

Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Poolad Imany; Ogaga D. Odele; Daniel E. Leaird; Zhe-Yu Ou; Minghao Qi; Andrew M. Weiner

We investigate the time-frequency signatures of an on-chip biphoton frequency comb (BFC) generated from a silicon nitride microring resonator. Using a Franson interferometer, we examine the multifrequency nature of the photon pair source in a time entanglement measurement scheme; having multiple frequency modes from the BFC results in a modulation of the interference pattern. This measurement together with a Schmidt mode decomposition shows that the generated continuous variable energy-time entangled state spans multiple pair-wise modes. Additionally, we demonstrate nonlocal dispersion cancellation, a foundational concept in time-energy entanglement, suggesting the potential of the chip-scale BFC for large-alphabet quantum key distribution.


Optics Express | 2014

Generation of biphoton correlation trains through spectral filtering

Joseph M. Lukens; Ogaga D. Odele; Carsten Langrock; Martin M. Fejer; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We demonstrate the generation of two-photon correlation trains based on spectral filtering of broadband biphotons. Programmable amplitude filtering is employed to create biphoton frequency combs, which when coupled with optical dispersion allows us to experimentally verify the temporal Talbot effect for entangled photons. Additionally, an alternative spectral phase-filtering approach is shown to significantly improve the overall efficiency of the generation process when a comb-like spectrum is not required. Our technique is ideal for the creation of tunable and high-repetition-rate biphoton states.


Optics Express | 2016

Integrated line-by-line optical pulse shaper for high-fidelity and rapidly reconfigurable RF-filtering.

Andrew J. Metcalf; Hyoung-Jun Kim; Daniel E. Leaird; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Keith A. McKinzie; Vikrant Lal; Amir Hosseini; Gloria E. Hoefler; Fred A. Kish; Andrew M. Weiner

We present a 32 channel indium phosphide integrated pulse shaper with 25 GHz channel spacing, where each channel is equipped with a semiconductor optical amplifier allowing for programmable line-by-line gain control with submicrosecond reconfigurability. We critically test the integrated pulse shaper by using it in comb-based RF-photonic filtering experiments where the precise gain control is leveraged to synthesize high-fidelity RF filters which we reconfigure on a microsecond time scale. Our on-chip pulse shaping demonstration is unmatched in its combination of speed, fidelity, and flexibility, and will likely open new avenues in the field of advanced broadband signal generation and processing.


Optics Letters | 2017

Direct soliton generation in microresonators

Chengying Bao; Yi Xuan; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Daniel E. Leaird; Minghao Qi; Andrew M. Weiner

We investigate, numerically and experimentally, the effect of thermo-optical (TO) chaos on soliton generation dynamics in microresonators. Numerical simulations that include the thermal dynamics show that the generated solitons can either survive or annihilate when the pump laser is scanned from blue to red and then stop at a fixed wavelength; the outcome is stochastic and is strongly related to the number of solitons generated. The random fluctuations of the cavity resonance occurring under TO chaos are also found to trigger delayed spontaneous soliton generation after the laser scan ends, which could enable soliton excitation with slow laser tuning speed. Stochastic soliton annihilation/survival, as well as delayed spontaneous soliton generation, is observed experimentally in a silicon-nitride microresonator.


Optics Letters | 2015

Electro-optic modulation for high-speed characterization of entangled photon pairs

Joseph M. Lukens; Ogaga D. Odele; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We demonstrate a new biphoton manipulation and characterization technique based on electro-optic intensity modulation and time shifting. By applying fast modulation signals with a sharply peaked cross-correlation to each photon from an entangled pair, it is possible to measure temporal correlations with significantly higher precision than that attainable using standard single-photon detection. Low-duty-cycle pulses and maximal-length sequences are considered as modulation functions, reducing the time spread in our correlation measurement by a factor of five compared to our detector jitter. With state-of-the-art electro-optic components, we expect the potential to surpass the speed of any single-photon detectors currently available.


Optics Express | 2015

Tunable delay control of entangled photons based on dispersion cancellation

Ogaga D. Odele; Joseph M. Lukens; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Carsten Langrock; Martin M. Fejer; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We propose and demonstrate a novel approach for controlling the temporal position of the biphoton correlation function using pump frequency tuning and dispersion cancellation; precise waveguide engineering enables biphoton generation at different pump frequencies while the idea of nonlocal dispersion cancellation is used to create the relative signal-idler delay and simultaneously prevents broadening of their correlation. Experimental results for delay shifts up to ±15 times the correlation width are shown along with discussions of the performance metrics of this approach.


Optics Letters | 2017

Soliton repetition rate in a silicon-nitride microresonator

Chengying Bao; Yi Xuan; Cong Wang; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Daniel E. Leaird; Minghao Qi; Andrew M. Weiner

We show soliton-self-frequency-shift (SSFS) in a SiN microresonator dominates the change of soliton repetition rate relative to thermal effects. The SSFS-induced repetition rate change with detuning is not directly dependent on the dispersion.


APL Photonics | 2017

High-speed switching of biphoton delays through electro-optic pump frequency modulation

Ogaga D. Odele; Joseph M. Lukens; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Poolad Imany; Carsten Langrock; Martin M. Fejer; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

The realization of high-speed tunable delay control has received significant attention in the scene of classical photonics. In quantum optics, however, such rapid delay control systems for entangled photons have remained undeveloped. Here for the first time, we demonstrate rapid (2.5 MHz) modulation of signal-idler arrival times through electro-optic pump frequency modulation. Our technique applies the quantum phenomenon of nonlocal dispersion cancellation along with pump frequency tuning to control the relative delay between photon pairs. Chirped fiber Bragg gratings are employed to provide large amounts of dispersion which result in biphoton delays exceeding 30 ns. This rapid delay modulation scheme could be useful for on-demand single-photon distribution in addition to quantum versions of pulse position modulation.

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Joseph M. Lukens

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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