Publication | Open Access
Experimental Demonstration of Nonlinear Scattering Processes in a Microbottle Resonator Based on a Robust Packaged Platform
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Citations
32
References
2021
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringMicrobottle ResonatorMechanical EngineeringOptomechanical SystemMetamaterialsRaman-assisted FwmFiber OpticsOptomechanicsMicroactuatorMicro-electromechanical SystemQuantum MetamaterialsVibrationsSoft RoboticsOptical PropertiesFour-wave MixingMicrofluidicsRobust Packaged PlatformNanophotonicsPhotonicsPhysicsPhotonic MaterialsMechatronicsClassical OpticsNonlinear Scattering ProcessesMicrofabricationApplied PhysicsMechanical SystemsAcoustic TweezerNanofabricationMicrobottle ResonatorsDynamic Metamaterials
Microbottle resonators (MBR) have attracted research interest for studying nonlinear optical interactions in last two decades, due to the ultra-tight optical confinement in spaces of three dimensions. In this paper, silica MBRs exhibiting rich resonant modes with ultra-high quality factor up to <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"><tex-math notation="LaTeX">$3.73 \times {10^8}$</tex-math></inline-formula> are demonstrated, based on which a portable and robust packaged platform with a tapered fiber coupling is established. Such a packaged platform effectively avoids external perturbations such as air flow and tiny mechanical vibrations, which supports our experimental demonstration of nonlinear scattering effects including four-wave mixing (FWM), simulated Raman scattering, and simulated Brillouin scattering. As a result, Raman-assisted FWM and Brillouin-assisted FWM are observed due to the strong field enhancement in the MBR. In a further investigation, a Kerr frequency comb with broad bandwidth of ∼200 nm and a Raman-assisted comb with a bandwidth up to ∼50 nm is achieved, correspondingly. Our works show the versatility of MBR for fundamental research and may open a new route to the development of practical applications in frequency conversion, spectroscopy and communications.
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