Abstract

Supercontinuum (SC) can be generated directly from a random fiber laser (RFL). However, its spectral bandwidth and flatness need to be further optimized for many practical applications. To solve this issue, a RFL based on random distributed Rayleigh scattering in photonic crystal fiber is demonstrated for the first time in this paper. The experimental results revealed that compared with the traditional single or double clad fiber, photonic crystal fiber not only can provide random distributed feedback effectively, but is also a superior nonlinear medium for SC generation which can realize better spectral width and flatness. A flat SC covering 400 nm to 2300 nm is obtained directly from a RFL based on photonic crystal fiber and the corresponding 20 dB bandwidth is more than 1600 nm, which is the widest ever reported to the best of our knowledge. The optical rogue waves caused by solitonic collisions can explain the instability of the output pulses in the time domain. This work proves that photonic crystal fiber can be used in RFL to provide random distributed feedback as well as nonlinear medium for spectrum broadening, and the spectral width and flatness of the generated SC is as good as the conventional method of using a high peak power pulsed laser to pump a piece of photonic crystal fiber, which can greatly reduce the cost of the SC and enrich the research scope of SC as well as RFL.

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