Abstract

Various laser technologies deliver picosecond pulses in the range of a few µJ pulse energy and at MHz repetition rates. Compressing these pulses efficiently down to the femtosecond regime is important for various applications in fundamental science and technology. SPM-induced spectral broadening in a large mode area (LMA) fiber and subsequent temporal compression can produce large compression factors and high efficiencies [1, 2]. However, fiber damage limits the maximum achievable compressed pulse energy to less than 1 µJ. Even state-of-the-art silica LMA fibers appear not suitable to compress substantially higher pulse energies due to bulk damage and self-focusing, which limits the maximum peak power to ≈4 MW [3]. One way to overcome these limitations is the use of gas filled HC-PCF, which offer long interaction lengths and small mode areas. Compression of 120-fs pulses to 50-fs at mW average power levels has been demonstrated in a xenon-filled standard photonic band gap (PBG) fiber [4]. In our experiment we used a Kagome-type HC-PCF, for which the field overlap is more than ten times lower [5]. Since the damage threshold scales inversely with the field overlap, guiding of high pulse energies and peak powers becomes feasible.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call