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Dive into the research topics where Frank Setzpfandt is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank Setzpfandt.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Spatial and Spectral Light Shaping with Metamaterials

Benny Walther; Christian Helgert; Carsten Rockstuhl; Frank Setzpfandt; Falk Eilenberger; Ernst-Bernhard Kley; Falk Lederer; Andreas Tünnermann; Thomas Pertsch

Plasmonic metamaterials exhibit strong and tunable dispersion, as a result of their pronounced resonances. This dispersion is used to construct an ultrathin light-shaping element that produces different waves at two distinct wavelengths in the near IR range. The optical response of the pixelated element is adjusted by variations in the geometry of the metamaterials unit cell. Applications requiring spatial and spectral control of light become feasible.


Nano Letters | 2016

Resonantly Enhanced Second-Harmonic Generation Using III–V Semiconductor All-Dielectric Metasurfaces

Sheng Liu; Michael B. Sinclair; Sina Saravi; Gordon A. Keeler; Yuanmu Yang; John L. Reno; Gregory M. Peake; Frank Setzpfandt; Isabelle Staude; Thomas Pertsch; Igal Brener

Nonlinear optical phenomena in nanostructured materials have been challenging our perceptions of nonlinear optical processes that have been explored since the invention of lasers. For example, the ability to control optical field confinement, enhancement, and scattering almost independently allows nonlinear frequency conversion efficiencies to be enhanced by many orders of magnitude compared to bulk materials. Also, the subwavelength length scale renders phase matching issues irrelevant. Compared with plasmonic nanostructures, dielectric resonator metamaterials show great promise for enhanced nonlinear optical processes due to their larger mode volumes. Here, we present, for the first time, resonantly enhanced second-harmonic generation (SHG) using gallium arsenide (GaAs) based dielectric metasurfaces. Using arrays of cylindrical resonators we observe SHG enhancement factors as large as 10(4) relative to unpatterned GaAs. At the magnetic dipole resonance, we measure an absolute nonlinear conversion efficiency of ∼2 × 10(-5) with ∼3.4 GW/cm(2) pump intensity. The polarization properties of the SHG reveal that both bulk and surface nonlinearities play important roles in the observed nonlinear process.


Optics Letters | 2015

Fabrication of nanoscale lithium niobate waveguides for second-harmonic generation

Reinhard Geiss; Sina Saravi; Anton Sergeyev; Séverine Diziain; Frank Setzpfandt; Frank Schrempel; Rachel Grange; Ernst-Bernhard Kley; Andreas Tünnermann; Thomas Pertsch

Nanoscale waveguides are basic building blocks of integrated optical devices. Especially, waveguides made from nonlinear optical materials, such as lithium niobate, allow access to a broad range of applications using second-order nonlinear frequency conversion processes. Based on a lithium niobate on insulator substrate, millimeter-long nanoscale waveguides were fabricated with widths as small as 200 nm. The fabrication was done by means of potassium hydroxide-assisted ion-beam-enhanced etching. The waveguides were optically characterized in the near infrared wavelength range showing phase-matched second-harmonic generation.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2010

Experimental determination of the dispersion relation of light in metamaterials by white-light interferometry

Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin; Frank Setzpfandt; Christian Helgert; Uwe Hübner; Christoph Menzel; A. Chipouline; Carsten Rockstuhl; Andreas Tünnermann; Falk Lederer; Thomas Pertsch

We present a method to experimentally measure the complex reflection and transmission coefficients of optical waves at metamaterials under normal incidence. This allows us to determine their pertinent dispersion relation without resorting to numerical simulations. For this purpose we employ a spectrometer and a white light interferometer for amplitude and phase measurements, respectively. To demonstrate the reliability of the method, it is applied to two referential metamaterial geometries, namely, the fishnet and the double-element structure. Involved aspects of the phase measurements as well as the accuracy of the method are discussed.


Laser & Photonics Reviews | 2016

Tunable generation of entangled photons in a nonlinear directional coupler

Frank Setzpfandt; Alexander S. Solntsev; James Titchener; Che Wen Wu; Chunle Xiong; R. Schiek; Thomas Pertsch; Dragomir N. Neshev; Andrey A. Sukhorukov

The on-chip integration of quantum light sources has enabled the realization of complex quantum photonic circuits. However, for the practical implementation of such circuits in quantum information applications, it is crucial to develop sources delivering entangled quantum photon states with on-demand tunability. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate the concept of a widely tunable quantum light source based on spontaneous parametric down-conversion in a simple nonlinear directional coupler. We show that spatial photon-pair correlations and entanglement can be reconfigured on-demand by tuning the phase difference between the pump beams and the phase mismatch inside the structure. We experimentally demonstrate the generation of split states, robust N00N states, various intermediate regimes and biphoton steering on a single chip. Furthermore we theoretically investigate other regimes allowing all-optically tunable generation of all Bell states and flexible control of path-energy entanglement. Such wide-range capabilities of a structure comprised of just two coupled nonlinear waveguides are attributed to the intricate interplay between linear coupling and nonlinear phase matching. This scheme provides an important advance towards the realization of reconfigurable quantum circuitry.


Optics Letters | 2009

Competing nonlinearities in quadratic nonlinear waveguide arrays

Frank Setzpfandt; Dragomir N. Neshev; Roland Schiek; Falk Lederer; Andreas Tünnermann; Thomas Pertsch

We demonstrate experimentally the existence of competing focusing and defocusing nonlinearities in a double-resonant system with quadratic nonlinear response. We use an array of periodically poled coupled optical waveguides and observe inhibition of the nonlinear beam self-action independent on power. This inhibition is demonstrated in both regimes of normal and anomalous beam diffraction.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Bandstructure measurement in nonlinear optical waveguide arrays

Frank Setzpfandt; Matthias Falkner; Thomas Pertsch; W. Sohler; R. Schiek

We demonstrate a technique for measuring the linear bandstructure of periodic systems with quadratic nonlinearity. The phase-matching constraints of parametric optical frequency mixing are employed to probe the longitudinal wavevectors of the eigenmodes. The method is verified experimentally by measuring the diffraction relation of eigenmodes in periodically poled titanium-indiffused lithium niobate waveguide arrays with second-harmonic generation.


Optics Express | 2015

Adiabatic light transfer in titanium diffused lithium niobate waveguides.

H. P. Chung; Kuang-Hsu Huang; Sung-Lin Yang; W. K. Chang; Che Wu; Frank Setzpfandt; Thomas Pertsch; Dragomir N. Neshev; Yen-Hung Chen

Ultra-broadband adiabatic light transfer was demonstrated for the first time in lithium niobate. Coupling bandwidths and efficiencies of ~540 nm and >0.96, respectively, were obtained with 5-cm long Ti:LiNbO3 adiabatic couplers for both polarization modes.


Science Advances | 2017

High–bit rate ultra-compact light routing with mode-selective on-chip nanoantennas

Rui Guo; Manuel Decker; Frank Setzpfandt; Xin Gai; Duk-Yong Choi; Roman Kiselev; A. Chipouline; Isabelle Staude; Thomas Pertsch; Dragomir N. Neshev; Yuri S. Kivshar

We show directional light routing and high–bit rate data transmission using a nanoantenna integrated on a low-loss waveguide. Optical nanoantennas provide a promising pathway toward advanced manipulation of light waves, such as directional scattering, polarization conversion, and fluorescence enhancement. Although these functionalities were mainly studied for nanoantennas in free space or on homogeneous substrates, their integration with optical waveguides offers an important “wired” connection to other functional optical components. Taking advantage of the nanoantenna’s versatility and unrivaled compactness, their imprinting onto optical waveguides would enable a marked enhancement of design freedom and integration density for optical on-chip devices. Several examples of this concept have been demonstrated recently. However, the important question of whether nanoantennas can fulfill functionalities for high-bit rate signal transmission without degradation, which is the core purpose of many integrated optical applications, has not yet been experimentally investigated. We introduce and investigate directional, polarization-selective, and mode-selective on-chip nanoantennas integrated with a silicon rib waveguide. We demonstrate that these nanoantennas can separate optical signals with different polarizations by coupling the different polarizations of light vertically to different waveguide modes propagating into opposite directions. As the central result of this work, we show the suitability of this concept for the control of optical signals with ASK (amplitude-shift keying) NRZ (nonreturn to zero) modulation [10 Gigabit/s (Gb/s)] without significant bit error rate impairments. Our results demonstrate that waveguide-integrated nanoantennas have the potential to be used as ultra-compact polarization-demultiplexing on-chip devices for high–bit rate telecommunication applications.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2015

Supercontinuum generation in quadratic nonlinear waveguides without quasi-phase matching.

Hairun Guo; Binbin Zhou; Michael Steinert; Frank Setzpfandt; Thomas Pertsch; H. P. Chung; Yen-Hung Chen; Morten Bache

Supercontinuum generation (SCG) is most efficient when the solitons can be excited directly at the pump laser wavelength. Quadratic nonlinear waveguides may induce an effective negative Kerr nonlinearity, so temporal solitons can be directly generated in the normal (positive) dispersion regime overlapping with common ultrafast laser wavelengths. There is no need for waveguide dispersion engineering. Here, we experimentally demonstrate SCG in standard lithium niobate (LN) waveguides without quasi-phase matching (QPM), pumped with femtosecond pulses in the normal dispersion regime. The observed large bandwidths (even octave spanning), together with other experimental data, indicate that negative nonlinearity solitons are indeed excited, which is backed up by numerical simulations. The QPM-free design reduces production complexity, extends the maximum waveguide length, and limits undesired spectral resonances. Finally, nonlinear crystals can be used where QPM is inefficient or impossible, which is important for mid-IR SCG. QPM-free waveguides in mid-IR nonlinear crystals can support negative nonlinearity solitons, as these waveguides have a normal dispersion at the emission wavelengths of mid-IR ultrafast lasers.

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Dragomir N. Neshev

Australian National University

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Andrey A. Sukhorukov

Australian National University

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Alexander S. Solntsev

Australian National University

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Yuri S. Kivshar

Australian National University

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W. Sohler

University of Paderborn

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