Nature Communications (Sep 2024)

Femtosecond pulse amplification on a chip

  • Mahmoud A. Gaafar,
  • Markus Ludwig,
  • Kai Wang,
  • Thibault Wildi,
  • Thibault Voumard,
  • Milan Sinobad,
  • Jan Lorenzen,
  • Henry Francis,
  • Jose Carreira,
  • Shuangyou Zhang,
  • Toby Bi,
  • Pascal Del’Haye,
  • Michael Geiselmann,
  • Neetesh Singh,
  • Franz X. Kärtner,
  • Sonia M. Garcia-Blanco,
  • Tobias Herr

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52057-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Femtosecond laser pulses enable the synthesis of light across the electromagnetic spectrum and provide access to ultrafast phenomena in physics, biology, and chemistry. Chip-integration of femtosecond technology could revolutionize applications such as point-of-care diagnostics, bio-medical imaging, portable chemical sensing, or autonomous navigation. However, current chip-integrated pulse sources lack the required peak power, and on-chip amplification of femtosecond pulses has been an unresolved challenge. Here, addressing this challenge, we report >50-fold amplification of 1 GHz-repetition-rate chirped femtosecond pulses in a CMOS-compatible photonic chip to 800 W peak power with 116 fs pulse duration. This power level is 2–3 orders of magnitude higher compared to those in previously demonstrated on-chip pulse sources and can provide the power needed to address key applications. To achieve this, detrimental nonlinear effects are mitigated through all-normal dispersion, large mode-area and rare-earth-doped gain waveguides. These results offer a pathway to chip-integrated femtosecond technology with peak power levels characteristic of table-top sources.