APL Photonics (Jan 2020)

Electro-optic eigenfrequency tuning of potassium tantalate-niobate microresonators

  • Jan Szabados,
  • Christoph S. Werner,
  • Simon J. Herr,
  • Ingo Breunig,
  • Karsten Buse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5133029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 016106 – 016106-6

Abstract

Read online

Eigenfrequency tuning in microresonators is useful for a range of applications including frequency-agile optical filters and tunable optical frequency converters. In most of these applications, eigenfrequency tuning is achieved by thermal or mechanical means, while a few non-centrosymmetric crystals such as lithium niobate allow for such tuning using the linear electro-optic effect. Potassium tantalate-niobate (KTa1−xNbxO3 with 0 ≤ x ≤ 1, KTN) is a particularly attractive material for electro-optic tuning purposes. It has both non-centrosymmetric and centrosymmetric phases offering outstandingly large linear as well as quadratic electro-optic coefficients near the phase transition temperature. We demonstrate whispering-gallery resonators made of KTN with quality factors of Q > 107 and electro-optic eigenfrequency tuning of more than 100 GHz at λ = 1040 nm for moderate field strengths of E = 250 V/mm. The tuning behavior near the phase transition temperature is analyzed by introducing a simple theoretical model. These results pave the way for applications such as electro-optically tunable microresonator-based Kerr frequency combs.