The institute
FEMTO's news

A new source of infrared light thanks to fibre optic cascades

Scientists from  FEMTO-ST Institute and McGill University (Montreal, Canada) have designed and developed in collaboration with three French companies a light source covering the entire mid-infrared wavelength range: from 2 to 10 µm. This work, which is published in Laser and Photonics Reviews , opens up applications in spectrometry and biomedical imaging.

See the CNRS article

Fiber-based supercontinuum1 (SC) light sources have become enormously useful in the last decade for a wide range of industrial and scientific applications. New uses are constantly emerging due to their unique optical properties that combine high brightness, multi-octave frequency bandwidth, inherently fiber delivery and single-mode output. Applications include optical coherence tomography (OCT), material processing, chemical sensing, gas monitoring, broadband imaging, and absorption spectroscopy. State-of-the-art SC lasers are based on silica-glass microstructured optical fibers, providing watts of output power over the bandwidth 0.4-2 µm. However, many applications such as detection of chemical and biological species would benefit from extending the SC spectrum beyond the state-of-the-art, in particular towards the mid-infrared (IR) range. This currently motivates significant research effort focused on extending the wavelength coverage towards the 2 to 20 µm molecular fingerprint region.

Various infrared soft glasses based on chalcogenide, tellurite, telluride, heavy-metal oxide and fluoride have been used for drawing highly nonlinear fibers for the mid-infrared, and experiments have shown efficient mid-IR SC generation up to 14 µm in chalcogenide optical fibers and up to 16 µm in telluride fibers. However, most of these mid-IR SC sources have been demonstrated using bulky and expensive mid-IR pump sources such as optical parametric oscillators and amplifiers, making them impractical for most abovementioned applications.

Now writing in Laser and Photonics Reviews, S. Venck and coworkers (SelenOptics) report a compact all-fiber cascaded system which provides a supercontinuum emission spanning the entire 2-10 µm mid-infrared range, thus offering a new reliable laser solution for molecular spectroscopy, remote sensing, optical coherence tomography, and hyperspectral imaging. To get this broad continuous spectrum, they developed a more practical and elegant solution based on a cascaded silica-fluoride-chalcogenide fiber system directly pumped by a compact pulsed fiber laser at a wavelength of 1.55 µm. The initial laser spectrum was progressively broadened and redshifted in the three cascaded fibers through nonlinear optical effects, enabling a stepwise extension towards the mid-infrared. This all-fiber system was shown to generate a nearly flat broadband mid-infrared continuous spectrum from 2 µm to 10 µm (See Figure 1), the upper transmission limit of the chalcogenide fiber, with several tens of milliwatts of output power.

T.Sylvestre (FEMTO-ST), who managed the project with SelenOptics, says argues:“This simple technique paves the way for low cost, practical, and robust broadband sources for mid-IR sensing and spectroscopy. Nothing expect the synchrotron radiation can give wider bandwidth”. The authors further describe in their paper a fully-realistic numerical model used to design the fibers and to simulate the nonlinear pulse propagation through the cascaded fiber system and they use numerical results to discuss and optimize the physical processes underlying the spectral broadening in the cascaded system. The teams concur that their mid-infrared supercontinuum source is now ready for commercialization and they are working on ways forward.

This work involves researchers from the FEMTO-ST institute, The McGill University in Montréal (Canada) and three French companies ( SelenOptics, Le Verre Fluoré, Leukos) and is the result of a European H2020 Marie-Curie ITN project under grant agreement 722328, managed by CNRS.

https://doi.org/10.1002/lpor.202000011

Contact : Thibaut Sylvestre

  • Mention spéciale du jury sur le salon Micronora 2016

    Le département d’optique de FEMTO-ST, à travers Nadège Courjal et son équipe, a développé une nouvelle technologie d’usinage à haut facteur de forme par découpe-polissage permettant la réalisation d’une nouvelle génération de composants optiques miniatures sur le matériau niobate de lithium. Cette innovation lui a valu la mention spéciale du jury sur le salon international des microtechniques ou l’institut FEMTO-ST est présent du 27 au 30 septembre.

    Read more
  • L'institut FEMTO-ST partenaire d'un programme européen Marie-Curie H2020 Innovative Training Networ

    The department of Optics of the FEMTO-ST research institute in Besançon
    in France currently has a vacancy for 2 3-years Ph.D positions working in
    the development of mid-infrared and ultraviolet supercontinuum fiber sources within the

    Read more
  • Vincent Laude reçoit le prix IEEE Carl Hellmuth Hertz 2016

    Prix international décerné annuellement par la société Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control (IEEE/UFFC), il a été remis, au titre de l'année 2016 ce lundi 19 septembre à Tours, à Vincent Laude, chercheur à l’institut FEMTO-ST, pour ses « contributions substantielles à la physique des cristaux phononiques et des interactions entre son et lumière ».

    Read more
  • Rencontre thématique GDR Ondes

    "À la frontière de l’optique et de l’acoustique : optomécanique, cristaux phoxoniques, effet Brillouin, acousto-optique"

    Read more
  • L’ingénierie des métamatériaux révolutionne le confort sonore

    Solutions isolantes ultra-efficaces et d’épaisseur très fine, les métamatériaux acoustiques développés par une équipe de chercheurs de FEMTO-ST promettent de s’affranchir du bruit et des nuisances sonores. Le projet est accompagné par le programme de prématuration du CNRS.

    Read more
  • Micky Rakotondrabe reçoit le prix "Big on small"

    Le prix scientifique international "Big on small" remis à Micky Rakotondrabe (département AS2M) pour ses travaux en micromécatronique.

    Read more
  • FEMTO Share Tech DAY

    Femto-ST organise son 1er Share Tech Day sur le thème de la santé le 24 novembre prochain, à vos agendas !

    Read more
  • Atelier SMYLE, 22 et 23 septembre 2016

    Les ateliers SMYLE sont organisés dans le cadre du Collégium International franco-suisse SMYLE entre EPFL et FEMTO-ST.
    Cette année, des conférences et des sessions posters traiteront des sujets “Internet of things” et “Understand the issues and challenges of the connected world”.

    Read more
  • Le 1er prix de "Ma thèse en 180 secondes - Indonésie" remportée en Mécanique Appliquée

    Félicitations à Gemala Hapsari, Doctorante en Mécanique Appliquée, qui a remporté la finale Indonésienne du concours.

    Read more
  • FEMTO-ST conclut un partenariat pour la recherche avec PSA

    Le 19 mai dernier, la Région Bourgogne Franche-Comté et l’institut FEMTO-ST (par l’intermédiaire de ses établissements de tutelle)a signé une convention de partenariat avec le groupe PSA Peugeot Citroën en vue de renforcer les collaborations déjà existantes de recherche et de transfert de technologies.

    Read more