Abstract

Mid-infrared optical frequency combs are of significant interest for molecular spectroscopy due to the large absorption of molecular vibrational modes on one hand, and the ability to implement superior comb-based spectroscopic modalities with increased speed, sensitivity and precision on the other hand. Substantial advances in mid-infrared frequency comb generation have been made in recent years based on nonlinear frequency conversion, microresonator Kerr frequency combs, quantum cascade lasers and mode locking regimes. Here we demonstrate a simple, yet effective method for the direct generation of mid-infrared optical frequency combs in the region from ${2.5-4~\mu{\rm m}}$, i.e. ${2500-4000~{\rm cm}^{-1}}$ covering a large fraction of the functional group region, directly from a conventional and compact erbium-fiber-based femtosecond laser in the telecommunication band (i.e. ${1.55~\mu{\rm m}}$). The wavelength conversion is based on dispersive wave generation within the supercontinuum process in large-cross-section and dispersion-engineered silicon nitride (${\rm Si_3N_4}$) waveguides. The long-wavelength dispersive wave, with its position lithographically determined, performs as a mid-infrared frequency comb, whose coherence is demonstrated via optical heterodyne measurements. Such a simple and versatile approach to mid-infrared frequency comb generation is suitable for spectroscopic applications in the first mid-infrared atmospheric window. Moreover, the compactness and simplicity of the approach have the potential to realize compact dual-comb spectrometers. The generated combs have a fine teeth-spacing, making them also suitable for gas phase analysis.

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