Lara Scolari
Technical University of Denmark
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lara Scolari.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2005
Magnus W. Haakestad; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Martin Nielsen; Lara Scolari; Jesper Riishede; Helge E. Engan; Anders Bjarklev
Tunable bandgap guidance is obtained by filling the holes of a solid core photonic crystal fiber with a nematic liquid crystal and applying an electric field. The response times are measured and found to be in the millisecond range.
Optics Express | 2005
Lara Scolari; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Jesper Riishede; Anders Bjarklev; David Sparre Hermann; Anawati Anawati; Martin Nielsen; Paolo Bassi
We present an electrically controlled photonic bandgap fiber device obtained by infiltrating the air holes of a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) with a dual-frequency liquid crystal (LC) with pre-tilted molecules. Compared to previously demonstrated devices of this kind, the main new feature of this one is its continuous tunability due to the fact that the used LC does not exhibit reverse tilt domain defects and threshold effects. Furthermore, the dual-frequency features of the LC enables electrical control of the spectral position of the bandgaps towards both shorter and longer wavelengths in the same device. We investigate the dynamics of this device and demonstrate a birefringence controller based on this principle.
Optics Express | 2007
Danny Noordegraaf; Lara Scolari; Jesper Lægsgaard; Lars Henning Rindorf; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold
We demonstrate electrically and mechanically induced long period gratings (LPGs) in a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) filled with a high-index liquid crystal. The presence of the liquid crystal changes the guiding properties of the fiber from an index guiding fiber to a photonic bandgap guiding fiber - a so called liquid crystal photonic bandgap (LCPBG) fiber. Both the strength and resonance wavelength of the gratings are highly tunable. By adjusting the amplitude of the applied electric field, the grating strength can be tuned and by changing the temperature, the resonance wavelength can be tuned as well. Numerical calculations of the higher order modes of the fiber cladding are presented, allowing the resonance wavelengths to be calculated. A high polarization dependent loss of the induced gratings is also observed.
Applied Optics | 2009
Lei Wei; Lars Eskildsen; Johannes Weirich; Lara Scolari; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Anders Bjarklev
We infiltrate photonic crystal fibers with a negative dielectric anisotropy liquid crystal. A 396 nm bandgap shift is obtained in the temperature range of 22-80 degrees C, and a 67 nm shift of long-wavelength bandgap edge is achieved by applying a voltage of 200 Vrms. The polarization sensitivity and corresponding activation loss are measured using polarized light and a full broadband polarization control setup. The electrically induced phase shift on the Poincaré sphere and corresponding birefringence change are also measured. According to the results, tunable wave plates working in the wavelength range of 1520-1580 nm and a potential for realizing a polarimeter working at the 1310 nm region are experimentally demonstrated.
Optics Letters | 2008
Danny Noordegraaf; Lara Scolari; Jesper Lægsgaard; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Giovanni Tartarini; Elena Borelli; Paolo Bassi; Jun Li; Shin-Tson Wu
We demonstrate a highly tunable deep notch filter realized in a liquid-crystal photonic-bandgap (LCPBG) fiber. The filter is realized without inducing a long-period grating in the fiber but simply by filling a solid-core photonic-crystal fiber with a liquid crystal and exploiting avoided crossings within the bandgap of the LCPBG fiber. The filter is demonstrated experimentally and investigated using numerical simulations. A high degree of tuning of the spectral position of the deep notch is also demonstrated.
Optics Express | 2009
Lara Scolari; Sebastian Gauza; Haiqing Xianyu; Lei Zhai; Lars Eskildsen; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Shin-Tson Wu; Anders Bjarklev
We infiltrate liquid crystals doped with BaTiO3 nanoparticles in a photonic crystal fiber and compare the measured transmission spectrum with the one achieved without dopant. New interesting features, such as frequency modulation response of the device and a transmission spectrum with tunable attenuation on the short wavelength side of the widest bandgap, suggest a potential application of this device as a tunable all-in-fiber gain equalization filter with an adjustable slope. The tunability of the device is achieved by varying the amplitude and the frequency of the applied external electric field. The threshold voltage for doped and undoped liquid crystals in a silica capillary and in a glass cell are also measured as a function of the frequency of the external electric field and the achieved results are compared.
Optics Express | 2011
Marko Laurila; Julien Saby; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Lara Scolari; Benjamin Cocquelin; François Salin; Jes Broeng; Jesper Lægsgaard
We demonstrate a Single-Mode (SM) Large-Mode-Area (LMA) ytterbium-doped PCF rod fiber laser with stable and close to diffraction limited beam quality with 110W output power. Distributed-Mode-Filtering (DMF) elements integrated in the cladding of the rod fiber provide a robust spatial mode with a Mode-Field-Diameter (MFD) of 59μm. We further demonstrate high pulse energy Second-Harmonic-Generation (SHG) and Third Harmonic Generation (THG) using a simple Q-switched single-stage rod fiber laser cavity architecture reaching pulse energies up to 1mJ at 515nm and 0.5mJ at 343nm.
Optics Express | 2009
Johannes Weirich; Jesper Lægsgaard; Lara Scolari; Lei Wei; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Anders Bjarklev
A simulation scheme for the transmission spectrum of a photonic crystal fiber infiltrated with a nematic liquid crystal and subject to an external bias is presented. The alignment of the biased liquid crystal is simulated using the finite element method to solve the relevant system of coupled partial differential equations. From the liquid crystal alignment the full tensorial dielectric permittivity in the capillaries is derived. The transmission spectrum for the photonic crystal fiber is obtained by solving the generalized eigenvalue problem deriving from Maxwells equations using a vector element based finite element method. We demonstrate results for a splay aligned liquid crystal infiltrated into the capillaries of a four-ring photonic crystal fiber and compare them to corresponding experiments.
Optics Express | 2008
Martin Nordal Petersen; Lara Scolari; Torger Tokle; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; Sebastian Gauza; Shin-Tson Wu; Anders Bjarklev
This paper reports on the first application of a liquid crystal infiltrated photonic bandgap fiber used as a tunable filter in an optical transmission system. The device allows low-cost amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise filtering and gain equalization with low insertion loss and broad tunability. System experiments show that the use of this filter increases for times the distance over which the optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) is sufficient for error-free transmission with respect to the case in which no filtering is used.
lasers and electro-optics society meeting | 2007
Lara Scolari; Giovanni Tartarini; Elena Borelli; Thomas Tanggaard Alkeskjold; H. C. Hansen Mulvad; Paolo Bassi; Anders Bjarklev
A tunable bandpass filter based on a photonic crystal fiber filled with two different liquid crystals is demonstrated. 130 nm bandwidth tunability is achieved by tuning the temperature from 30degC to 90degC.