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Session Overview
Session
POSTER SESSION 1
Time:
Wednesday, 13/Sept/2023:
10:30am - 12:00pm

Location: Foyer bar


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Presentations
ID: 118
TOM 8 Ultrafast Optics

Featurization of ultrafast expansion and geometrical properties of heterogeneous colliding plasmas

Haider Mahdi Al-Juboori1, Tom McCormack McCormack2

1South East Technological University; 2University College Dublin

Numerous fields of research and industry have undergone revolutionary change because of the unique characteristics of ultrashort laser pulses. Moreover, the ultrafast imaging sensors, such as ICCD technique, can help to understand the ionization features and expansion properties of colliding laser-induced plasma (CLPP) and related stagnation layer (S.L.) geometry. In this work, the effort will be focused on CLPP experiments from two seeds of heterogeneous elements. The research's goal is to analyse the geometrical development of the colliding plasma, the temporal evolution of plume composition features and its associated characteristics. The expansion velocity and forward propagation range (FPR) of the stagnation layer in a nanosecond scale—both of which have been discovered. The ultrafast imaging results give the sight and explain the possibilities of extant technologies that can help to re-engineer the plasma characteristics for the next generation of lithography applications or new selective physical concepts.



ID: 119
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Laser-printed emissive metasurface as an optical security platform

Myeongkyu Lee, Dongkyun Kang, Jungwoo Pyo, Jaehyeong Kim, Yinhyui Joo, Jongyun Jeon

Yonsei University, Korea, Republic of (South Korea)

Optical security is a promising application of metasurfaces because light has large degrees of freedom in metasurfaces. Although many different structures/materials have been proposed for this purpose, the fabrication of dynamic metasurfaces in a straightforward and scalable manner while maintaining a high security level remains a significant challenge. Herein, a metasurface consisting of a phase-changing Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST) layer and a thin metal back reflector is presented to space-selectively and dynamically control the infrared emission of the surface by a spatially modulated pulsed laser beam. Unlike conventional laser processes using a focused beam, the employed laser printing is an expanded beam-based parallel process that enables the fabrication of wafer-sized emission patterns. Owing to the multispectral responses of GST, mutually independent visible and infrared images can be printed in one region. Grayscale emission patterns can also be obtained by gradually modulating the spatial profile of the laser beam, which makes the replication of laser-printed emission patterns extremely difficult. We also demonstrate that colors images can be obtained by depositing IR lossless layer on the GST surface. All these features indicate that the presented emissive metasurface has the potential for use as an effective platform for anti-counterfeiting



ID: 129
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Fabrication of Er3+ doped tellurite whispering gallery mode microsphere laser using 0.98 μm and 1.48 μm pump lasers

Snigdha Thekke Thalakkal1, Davor Ristic1, Daniil Zhivotkov1, Gualtiero Nunzi Conti2, Stefano Pelli2, Mile Ivanda1

1Institute Ruder Boskovic, Croatia; 2IFAC – CNR, 50019 Sesto Fiorentino, Italy.

We reported lasing in Er3+ doped tellurite glass whispering gallery mode microspheres fabricated using the plasma torch method.15Na2O25WO360TeO2 doped with 0.5 mol% Er3+ is used for the fabrication of microspheres. Laser light from the pump is coupled to the microsphere through a half and a full tapered fiber. An optical spectrum analyzer receives the counter propagating light from the microsphere. Pump lasers of 980 nm and 1480 nm are used to achieve the laser emission at 1570 nm.



ID: 130
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Silica optical fibers for a detection of X-ray radiation

Jana Probostova1, Vitezslav Jary2, Alena Beitlerova2, Pavla Nekvindova3, Petr Varak3, Jan Mrazek1

1Institute of Photonics and Electronics, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic; 2Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences; 3Department of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Chemistry and Technology

The special attention has been paid to visualization and monitoring of harmful radiation to quantify the radiation intensity and prevent the undesired exposition. For these purposes, so called radioluminescent materials are widely exploited. Special attention has been paid to the research of luminescence optical fibers, which can be used for a construction of distributed optical sensors. We present a versatile nanoparticle doping approach to Zn2+-doped silica optical fibers. Zinc oxide nanoparticles were applied into porous silica frit by a nanoparticle-doping method providing a preform which was drawn into an optical fiber. The maximum concentration of Zn2+ ions in the fiber was 0.78 at. % causing the refractive index reached the value of 1.459. The fiber outer diameter was 124.8m and the fiber core diameter was 14.9 m matching the standard telecommunication dimension. The fibers exhibited a blue radioluminescence showing the emission maximum at 395 nm. The fiber properties make them worthy of investigation as sensing elements of distributed sensors of high energy radiation.



ID: 131
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Nanoporous metallic networks: growth process and optical properties

Adi Salomon, Mohamed Hamode, Racheli Ron, Alon Krause

Bar-Ilan university, Israel

Abstract. Nanoporous metallic systems exhibit a new generation of advanced materials with potential in a wide variety of technological fields among them catalysis, photonics, optoelectronics and sensors. Their high surface-to-volume ratio, multimodal nanoscale moieties, ability to host guest materials, and inhomogeneous surface at the submicron scale distinct them from both bulk metals and conventional plasmonic materials as well as meta-surfaces. Those structures can be prepared through different fabrication and synthesis strategies including chemical dealloying, assembly of pre-synthesized metallic nanoparticles, and via templating. In a sharp contrast with these preparation strategies, we have demonstrated one can fabricate a macroscopic nanopourus metallic networks by using physical vapor deposition in a short single-step process. These materials are highly pure, and they show very unique linear and non-linear optical properties, among them high Second-Harmonic-generation response.

Herein, we will discuss their growth process mechanism, and utilize it for more complex 3d structure which behave as SHG reflectors.



ID: 134
TOM 3 BioPhotonics

Multispectral imaging via feature selection: a frugal innovation approach for pathogen identification

Denis Leroux, Manuel Petit, Corinne Davenas, Corine Fulchiron

bioMérieux, France

In order to develop an affordable clinical diagnostic instrument for use in more decentralized settings, we have assessed the feasibility to move from hyperspectral to multispectral imaging via parsimonious feature selection. The targeted application is the label-free identification, at the species-level of uropathogens from images of bacterial colonies on their growth support. We show that the number of predictors, i.e. discrete spectral channels, can be dramatically reduced from hundreds to less than 10 channels with limited or no performance loss. The impact of bandwidth is also investigated to take into account the high degree of redundancy of raster images obtained by diffuse reflectance and propose a suitable design for a simple filterwheel based solution. Targeting the 8 most prevalent bacterial species responsible for > 80% of urinary tract infections, up to 94% of correct identification rates was reached using only 4 narrow spectral windows extracted from degraded hyperspectral images.



ID: 137
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Fabrication error analysis of nonperiodic-multilayer-dielectric gratings

Di Zhang, Lijiang Zeng

Tsinghua University, China, People's Republic of

We analyzed fabrication errors of nonperiodic-multilayer-dielectric gratings that were designed to have a high reflective diffraction efficiency for one wavelength and a high transmittance for another wavelength at the same time. Significant deviations were found between the measured and calculated efficiency values although the groove profile parameters were very closed to the design values. The source of error was attributed to coating errors of the film stack. To explain the deviation well, we estimated the parameters of actual coating stack by reverse calculations and using scanning electron microscope. We recalculated the diffraction efficiencies and the results showed that the actual film stack parameters were inverted well. This provided a foundation for us to reoptimize grating groove parameters on the basis of actual coating stack.



ID: 144
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Colour-coded nanoscale calibration and optical quantification of axial fluorophore position

Ilya Olevsko-Arad1,2, Moshe Feldberg2, Martin Oheim3, Adi Salomon1,2

1Chemistry department, Bar-Ilan University, 529000, Ramat-Gan, Israel; 2Institute of Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials (BINA), Bar-Ilan University, 529000, Ramat-Gan, Israel; 3Université de Paris, CNRS, SPPIN – Saints-Pères Paris Institute for the Neurosciences, Paris, France

Total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) has come of age, but a reliable and easy-to-use tool for calibrating evanescent-wave penetration depths is missing. We provide a test-sample for TIRF and other axial super-resolution microscopies for emitter axial calibration. Our originality is that nanometer(nm) distances along the microscope’s optical axis are color-encoded in the form of a multi-layered multi-colored transparent sandwich. Emitter layers are excited by the same laser but they emit in different colors. Layers are deposited in a controlled manner onto a glass substrate and protected with a non-fluorescent polymer. Decoding the penetration depth of the exciting evanescent field, by spectrally unmixing of multi-colored samples is presented as well. Our slide can serve as a test sample for quantifying TIRF, but also as an axial ruler for nm-axial distance measurements in single-molecule localization microscopies, supercritical-angle fluorescence, and related super-resolution.



ID: 153
TOM 3 BioPhotonics

Multispectral imaging for pathogen identification using a filter wheel and smartphone: a frugal innovation approach

Denis Leroux, Florian Alonso, Tanguy Coent, Maeva Garros, Régis Montvernay, Yann Le Bihan, Corine Fulchiron

bioMérieux, France

To create an affordable clinical test for use in more decentralized settings, we are developing a multispectral imaging system based on a filter wheel and a smartphone. Our application is the label-free identification of uropathogens from images of bacterial colonies directly on a non-chromogenic culture medium. Using feature selection techniques, we have previously shown through calculations, the possibility to move from hyper- to multi- spectral imaging by exploiting less than 8 spectral bands. Here, we confirm our findings by testing a database of true multispectral images acquired using a filter wheel holding up to 22 dichroic bandpass filters with a 10 nm bandwidth. Performance is reported for 5 species using only 6 filters. Probabilistic SVM algorithms were implemented to allow to reject species other than the targeted most prevalent uropathogens as it is crucial to keep the false-positive rate low. Evolution of specificity and sensitivity with probability threshold are discussed in the light of probability frequency distributions.



ID: 161
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Design of an optical system equipped with blue LEDs for the irradiation of Drosophila melanogaster cultures

Mónica Andrea López Bautista, Viviana Matilde Mesa Cornejo, Jorge Enrique Mejía Sánchez

Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico

A longer exposure to blue light has negative effects on organisms, therefore we present an optical assembly based on a hexagonal design with blue LED light for homogeneous irradiation of cultures of Drosophila melanogaster, which has a variability range of illuminance controlled by the change of local current, useful for the evaluation of various factors under this parameter.



ID: 162
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Analysis of a vertically aligned liquid-crystal on silicon microdisplay for photonics applications

Guillem Nájar1, Andrés P. Bernabeu1, Adriana R. Sánchez-Montes1, Francisco J. Martínez-Guardiola1,2, Eva M. Calzado1,2, Inmaculada Pascual1,3, Daniel Puerto1,2, Andrés Márquez1,2

1I.U. Física Aplicada a las Ciencias y las Tecnologías Universidad de Alicante, P.O. Box 99, E-03080, Alicante, Spain; 2Dept. de Física, Ing. de Sistemas y Teoría de la Señal, Universidad de Alicante, P.O. Box 99, E-03080, Alicante, Spain; 3Dept. de Óptica, Farmacología y Anatomía, Universidad de Alicante, P.O. Box 99, E-03080, Alicante, Spain

We present the characterization results for an analogically addressed vertically aligned liquid crystal on silicon microdisplay (VA-LCoS). We show that it covers more than 360º phase modulation range at 1550 nm, and that in the visible the range available enables the generation of multiorder DOEs. There are basically no studies dealing with the characterization of vertically aligned high resolution LCoS devices, since the ones typically found in the literature and commercially available correspond to the parallel aligned. We have also verified that the microdisplay used in this work is free from flicker, which is a very interesting feature for application where the phase stability is of the utmost importance. The results shown here represent a first step in the work underway oriented to the generation of programmable DOEs for telecommunication applications (C-band) and for the visible spectrum.



ID: 164
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Experimental demonstration of a low repetition rate optical frequency comb

Francesco Canella1,2,3, Johannes Weitenberg2,4, Paras Dwivedi2,5, Fabian Schmid2, Gianluca Galzerano3, Theodor W. Hänsch2,5, Thomas Udem2,5, Akira Ozawa2

1Dipartimento di Fisica, Politecnico di Milano, 20133 Milan, Italy; 2Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik, Hans-Kopfermann-Straße 1, 85748 Garching, Germany; 3Istituto di Fotonica e Nanotecnologie, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, 20133 Milan, Italy; 4Fraunhofer-Institut für Lasertechnik ILT, Steinbachstraße 15, 52074 Aachen, Germany; 5Fakultät für Physik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Schellingstraße 4, 80799 München, Germany

Optical frequency combs operating at low repetition rate exhibit high pulse energy for a given average power. Therefore, low repetition rate frequency combs may efficiently drive nonlinear frequency conversion into the mid-infrared or extreme ultraviolet region to extend frequency metrology to such exotic wavelengths. In this work, we have experimentally demonstrated a low-noise optical frequency comb operating at 40 kHz repetition rate using a Yb:KYW mode-locked laser (center wavelength at 1030 nm, repetition rate 40 MHz) and an acousto-optic modulator-based pulse picker. We have stabilized a single comb mode to an ultra-stable continuous wave laser operating at 1033 nm. The integral rms phase noise (in the range 10 Hz - 20 kHz) was measured to be 167.2 mrad.



ID: 167
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Nanocrystalline (Ho0.03Y0.97)2Hf2O7 luminophore for near- and mid-infrared

Petr Varak1,2, Jan Mrazek1, Jana Probostova1

1Institute of Photonics and Electronics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic; 2Department of Inorganic Chemistry, UCT Prague, Prague, Czech Republic

In recent years, a great scientific effort was dedicated to extending the operating range of lasers and amplifiers beyond the conventional 1.5 – 2.0 μm. Lasers operating in the mid-infrared range 2 – 5 μm find various applications as LIDARs, sensors, medicine, etc. However, the commonly used silica glass is unsuitable for emission above 2 μm due to the high phonon energy of the silica lattice, which completely quenches emission at longer wavelengths. The materials based on crystalline structure are perspective low-phonon materials for laser operation in the mid-infrared rage. In this contribution, we present the preparation and properties of a novel laser-active material based on holmium-doped yttrium-hafniate (Ho0.03Y0.97)2Hf2O7. The emission around 3 μm is successfully demonstrated.



ID: 169
Special Session on “Opto-electronic Nanotechnologies and Microsystems” (ONM)

Contribution of the solar effect in LEDs and spectral responses

Kamel Remidi, Djamel Kendil

Department of Physics ENS Kouba Algeria, Algeria

This experimental work describes our work on spectrometric measurements (spectral responses) and measurement of sensitivity of solar radiation by (simulating the solar to a powered lamp) on commercial light emitting diodes of different colors (LEDs). The first experiment was carried out at the electronics department in University of USTHB Bab Ezzouar (Laboratory of thin layers) which has a measurement bench allowing the relative spectral representation of the photo of the detector noted Vphot (λ).

In addition, at ENS Kouba in the LSIC laboratory, a second work has also allowed us to set up a device which measures the sensitivity of different LEDs radiated by the lamp as a function of illumination power of a light source in using a luxmeter according to the voltage across the light emitting diodes (LEDs).



ID: 172
TOM 1 Silicon Photonics and Integrated Optics

Arrayed waveguide grating spectrometer on 2-µm-thick SOI platform

Janvit Tippinit, Markku Kuittinen, Matthieu Roussey

University of Eastern Finland, Finland

32-channel arrayed waveguide grating spectrometer (AWG) at 1800 nm is demonstrated on a 2-μm-thick silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) platform. The design and simulation of the device are performed using the beam propagation method (BPM) and we obtain the 3-dB channel width, channel spacing, and extinction ratio of 1.16 nm, 1.56 nm, and 5.17 dB, respectively. The AWG demultiplexer can be applied in the central part of a spectrometer which is replacing in integrated optics a prism or a grating in conventional free-space optics



ID: 173
TOM 1 Silicon Photonics and Integrated Optics

Mesoscopic optics in coupled microcavities

Martina Hentschel1, Tom Simon Rodemund1, Stefan Sinzinger2

1Institute of Physics, TU Chemnitz, Germany; 2Fachgebiet Technische Optik, Technische Universität Ilmenau, Germany

Deformed microdisc cavities possess versatile application potential ranging from microlasers to sensors. Here, we investigate arrays of several coupled microcavity resonators. The coupling interaction between the cavities induces a wide range of features that sensitively depend on, and therefore can be controlled via, the intercavity distance. We use semiclassical methods from mesoscopic optics to characterise the system and its dynamics in real and phase space using Husimi functions. Our findings can inspire novel optical devices such as supersensors or novel light sources.



ID: 178
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Bi-directional frequency shifting loops for real-time processing of broadband RF signals

Guillaume Bourdarot1,2, Jean-Philippe Berger2, Hugues Guillet de Chatellus1,3

1Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique, UGA/CNRS, 38000 Grenoble, France; 2Institut de Planétologie et d’Astrophysique de Grenoble, UGA/CNRS, 38000 Grenoble, France; 3Univ Rennes, CNRS, Institut FOTON - UMR 6082, 35000 Rennes, France

Analog photonic techniques can perform better than conventional digital electronics, which have significant limitations when it comes to processing fast RF signals on the fly. We show that a simple photonic architecture, based on a bi-directional frequency-shifting loop, makes it possible to calculate in real time the cross-correlation function of two broadband signals for about 200 values of their delay simultaneously. Additionally, our architecture also enables to perform spectral analysis of signals with 16 GHz instantaneous bandwidth, 100 % probability of interception, and detection electronics below 10 MSa/s.



ID: 184
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Figure of merit for design of ε-near-zero metamaterials with enhanced Kerr type nonlinearities

Francesca Dodici, Domenico Genchi, Tiziana Cesca, Giovanni Mattei

University of Padova, Department of Physics and Astronomy, NanoStructures Group (NSG), 35131, Padova, Italy

Metamaterials are artificial media designed to display properies going beyond those of ordinary materials. Particularly interesting are ε-near-zero (ENZ) media with real part of the permittivity going to zero in a certain spectral range. Examples of ENZ metamaterials are metal dielectric multilayers, which allow to tune the position of the ENZ wavelength depending on their composition and which have been found to have enhanced Kerr-type nonlinearities, i.e. nonlinear absorption and nonlinear refraction. In this work we define a figure of merit for the design of multilayer metamaterials with strong Kerr-type nonlinearities and compare our predictions with both simulations and experimental results.



ID: 195
Focused Sessions 4: Machine-Learning for Optics and Photonic Computing for AI

General application of the genetic algorithm to the estimation of the Liquid Crystal Director in PA-LC devices

Jaume Colomina1, Joan Josep Sirvent-Verdú1, Andrés Pérez-Bernabeu1, Tomás Lloret1, Belén Rodríguez-Nieto3, Cristian Neipp2, Augusto Beléndez1, Jorge Francés1

1Instituto de Física Aplicada a las Ciencias y las Tecnologías, Universidad de Alicante, 03690, San Vicente del Raspeig, España; 2Dpto. de Física, Ingeniería de Sistemas y Teoría de la Señal, Universidad de Alicante, 03690, San Vicente del Raspeig, España; 3Dpto. Optica, Farmacologia Y Anatomia, Universidad de Alicante, 03690, San Vicente del Raspeig, España

The study of liquid crystal (LC) director distribution is an important area of research in materials science and technology. Parallel-aligned liquid crystal (PA-LC) devices have been extensively studied due to their applications in liquid crystal displays, optical devices, and sensors. Estimating the LC director distribution is a critical step in designing and optimising PA-LC devices. This work shows the results derived from applying novel optimisation techniques to estimate the liquid crystal (LC) director distribution in parallel-aligned liquid crystal (PA-LC) devices. Moreover, the genetic algorithm (GA) has been applied and compared with the minimisation of the Frank-Oseen free energy through the Euler-Lagrange equations. The GA is a stochastic optimisation technique that can effectively explore the search space and find the global optimum. Overall, this study's results demonstrate the GA's effectiveness in estimating the LC director distribution in PA-LC devices. This approach can improve the performance and design of liquid crystal displays, optical devices, and sensors. Furthermore, it can be extended to other fields where the optimisation of complex systems is required. Further research is needed to optimise the GA parameters and to explore its potential in other applications.



ID: 202
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Optical fiber surface plasmon resonance for glucose detection

Cristina Cunha1,2, Susana Silva1, Luis C.C Coelho1, Orlando Frazão1, Susana Novais1

1INESCTEC, Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Porto, Portugal; 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, Faculty of Sciences of University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

This work proposes a sensor that utilizes a transmission scheme for measuring glucose aqueous solutions based on surface plasmon resonance. A comparison between the performance of two sensors with similar lengths and different diameters is performed. The first sensor comprises a multimode optical fiber with a diameter of 400 μm and a 10 mm middle section of the cladding removed. The second sensor is similar, except that the fiber has a diameter of 600 μm. The sensors were evaluated for their performance in measuring glucose concentrations ranging from 0.0001 to 0.5000 g/mL. The 400 μm sensor demonstrated high sensitivity however, the sensor with a diameter of 600 μm attained a slightly higher maximum sensitivity of 322.0 nm/(g/mL).



ID: 204
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Refractive index measurements of ethanol-water binary liquid solutions using a graded-index fiber tip sensor

Liliana Soares1,2, Cristina Cunha1,3, Susana Novais1, António Ferreira4,5, Orlando Frazão1, Susana Silva1

1INESC TEC – Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Porto, Portugal; 2Department of Engineering Physics, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal; 3Department of Physics and Astronomy, Faculty of Sciences, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal; 4LEPABE – Laboratory for Process Engineering, Environment, Biotechnology and Energy, Department of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal; 5ALiCE – Associate Laboratory in Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

The refractometric analysis of ethanol-water mixtures is hampered because this type of binary solution does not present a linear behaviour. In this work it is proposed a multimode Graded-Index Fiber (GIF) tip sensor for the measurement of ethanol in binary liquid solutions of ethanol-water. The probe is fabricated by fusion-splicing a 500 µm GIF to a Single Mode Fiber (SMF) and it operates as a refractometric sensor in reflection. Samples of ethanol-water mixtures were measured at different temperatures (20°C to 60°C) to evaluate the probe's capability to detect variations in ethanol refractive index. The samples have different % (v/v) of ethanol, in a range between 0% and 100%.



ID: 206
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

White light interferometry: absolute and high precision measurement for long-cavity fibre Fabry-Perot sensors

Paulo Robalinho1,2, A. Rodrigues1,2, Susana Novais1, A. B. Lobo Ribeiro3, Susana Silva1, Orlando Frazão1

1INESC TEC – Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Porto, Portugal; 2Department of Engineering Physics, Faculty of Engineering of University of Porto, Portugal; 3Faculty of Health Sciences, University Fernando Pessoa, R. Carlos da Maia 296, 4200-150 Porto, Portugal

White Light Interferometry, known for its absolute measurement capability and high precision, had its greatest scientific impact towards the end of the 20th century. In this work, it was assembled and characterized a fibre Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) as an interrogator and a fibre Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) as a displacement sensor. A measurement bandwidth between 65 μm and 95 μm was obtained for FPI cavities close to 2.35 mm, at sampling frequencies between 600 Hz and 1500 Hz. Additionally, a resonant frequency at 550 Hz was achieved, allowing for an interrogation band higher than 135 μm. It was also determined a minimum absolute resolution of ± 66 nm, corresponding to a relative resolution of ± 9.4×10-4 in relation to the total band.



ID: 213
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Laser assisted processing of nanocrystalline (Ho0.05Y0.95) 2Ti2O7 films for infrared photonics

Jan Mrazek, Ondřej Podrazký, Jana Proboštova, Petr Vařák, Ivo Bartoň, Yauhen Baravets

Institute of Photonics and Electronics CAS, Czech Republic

The existence of new highly thermally and chemically stable active optical materials is a challenging task for current photonics research targeted on high-power lasers. Holmium-doped titanates crystallizing in the pyrochlore lattice, represent a promising class of materials. However, their high processing temperature limits their applications in integrated optical devices. This weakness can be overcome by laser assisted processing as an alternative to common heat-treatment. The amorphous thin films were prepared by a sol-gel method followed by a dip-coating process and densified in a rapid thermal annealing furnace. The densified films were annealed by a CO2 laser beam. The laser irradiation induced a crystallization process resulting in the formation of nanocrystalline (Ho0.05Y0.95)Ti2O7. The prepared film of a thickness 576 nm exhibited an optical transmission of 91.66% close to the maximum theoretical limit of a silica substrate. The film's refractive index at 632 nm was 2.219. The formation of the nanocrystals caused the activation of the electronic transition 5I75I8 at 2 m and the emission bands showed the distinct Starks splitting which is characteristic for (Ho0.05Y0.95)Ti2O7 phosphors. The presented approach can be used to prepare transparent luminescence films as an alternative method to common heat-treatment processes.



ID: 215
Focused Sessions 4: Machine-Learning for Optics and Photonic Computing for AI

Machine-learning applied to the simulation of high harmonic generation driven by structured laser beams

Javier Serrano, José Miguel Pablos-Marín, Carlos Hernández-García

University of Salamanca, Spain

High harmonic generation (HHG) is one of the richest processes in strong-field physics. It allows to up-convert laser light from the infrared domain into the extreme-ultraviolet or even soft x-rays, that can be synthesized into laser pulses as short as tens of attoseconds. The exact simulation of such highly nonlinear and non-perturbative process requires to couple the laser-driven wavepacket dynamics given by the three-dimensional time-dependent Schrödinger equation (3D-TDSE) with the Maxwell equations to account for macroscopic propagation. Such calculations are extremely demanding, well beyond the state-of-the-art computational capabilities, and approximations, such as the strong field approximation, need to be used. In this work we show that the use of machine learning, in particular deep neural networks, allows to simulate macroscopic HHG within the 3D-TDSE, revealing hidden signatures in the attosecond pulse emission that are neglected in the standard approximations. Our HHG method assisted by artificial intelligence is particularly suited to simulate the generation of soft x-ray structured attosecond pulses.



ID: 218
TOM 1 Silicon Photonics and Integrated Optics

On-chip integrated metasurfaces for circular light polarization for trapped-ion quantum applications

Anastasiia Sorokina1,2, Pascal Gehrmann1,2, Steffen Sauer1,2, Carl-Frederik Grimpe3, Guochun Du3, Elena Jordan3, Tanja Mehlstäubler3,4,5, Stefanie Kroker1,2,3

1Technische Universität Braunschweig, Institute of Semiconductor Technology; 2Laboratory for Emerging Nanometrology (LENA); 3Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt; 4Leibniz Universität Hannover, Institut für Quantenoptik; 5Leibniz Universität Hannover, Laboratorium für Nano- und Quantenengineering

In order to accomplish more functional and efficient light routing on a chip, photonic integration is necessary. Particularly in quantum technologies, which require a high precision of operation, avoiding bulky optical arrangements is in high demand. Scalable and robust photonic components open up a plethora of possibilities. The light guiding systems have to be able to cover a wide range of operational wavelengths and different light polarization states. In this work, we present the first numerical results for our approach of a PIC producing NIR circularly polarized light based on a Si3N4 material platform. This concept includes waveguides and metasurfaces that are easily integrable on the chip surface of many trapped-ion quantum computer architectures.



ID: 220
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Polygons of quantized vortices in nonlinear photonic waveguides

Humberto Michinel Álvarez, Angel Paredes, Jose Ramon Salgueiro

Universidade de Vigo, Spain

In a nonlinear optical waveguide with defocusing Kerr-type nonlinearity, we discuss the existence of a type of stationary nonlinear waves with propagation-invariant density profiles, consisting of vortices located at the vertices of a regular polygon with or without an anti-vortex at its center.These polygons rotate around the center of the system and we provide approximate expressions for their angular velocity. We have computed the evolution of the vortex structures and discuss their stability and the fate of the instabilities that can unravel the regular polygon configurations. Such instabilities can be driven by the instability of the vortices themselves, by vortex-antivortex annihilation or by the eventual breaking of the symmetry due to the motion of the vortices.



ID: 222
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Liquid Phase Epitaxy growth and luminescence of Terbium-doped Gd3Ga5O12 crystalline layers

Amandine Baillard1, Paul-Antoine Douissard2, Pavel Loiko1, Laura Wollesen2, Thierry Martin2, Eric Mathieu2, Eric Ziegler2, Gurvan Brasse1, Patrice Camy1

1Centre de Recherche sur les Ions, les Matériaux et la Photonique (CIMAP), UMR 6252 CEA-CNRS-ENSICAEN, Université de Caen Normandie, 6 Blvd Maréchal Juin, 14050 Caen, France; 2European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF), 71 Avenue des Martyrs, 38043 Grenoble, France

Tb3+-doped single-crystalline Gd3Ga5O12 layers are grown by Liquid Phase Epitaxy on (111)-oriented undoped substrates, and their structure, composition, morphology and photo- and radioluminescence are studied. Layers doped with 6 at.% Tb3+ with a thickness up to 20 μm appear promising for single crystal film scintillators with a sub-μm spatial resolution and waveguide lasers as they exhibit good quality, uniform distribution of Tb3+ ions, optimized light output (~50% of that for Ce:YAG), weak concentration quenching of luminescence and low afterglow for a 15 bit dynamic range.



ID: 225
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Enhanced epsilon-near-zero structures for photonics

Roman Calpe1, Matias Koivurova2,3, Tommi K. Hakala1, Jari Turunen1

1Center for Photonics Sciences, University of Eastern Finland; 2Tampere Institute for Advanced Study, Tampere University; 3Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Tampere University

We present an experimental realization of a novel layered metamaterial we label enhanced

epsilon-near-zero (eENZ). The structure is a stack of alternating thin films made of ENZ– and dielectric

material and it can be designed for desired refractive/reflective properties by appropriately tuning the film

thicknesses. The structure supports thin film resonances, guided modes and Ferrel-Berreman plasmon modes

and the performance of the structure shows a large improvement to many currently available bulk ENZ

materials. Additionally, we recently demonstrated the possible use of eENZ for coherence switching in lasers

[1]. We demonstrate the design, fabrication and characterization of the optical properties of the eENZ stack

and compare the measured transmission properties with transfer matrix method (TMM) simulations.



ID: 228
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Er-doped zinc-silicate glass-ceramics with enhanced emission in the near-infrared region

Petr Varak1,2, Pavla Nekvindova1, Jan Baborak1

1University of chemistry and technology, Prague, Czech Republic; 2Institute of Photonics and Electronics of the Czech Academy of Sciecnes, Czech Republic

Erbium-doped lasers and amplifiers exhibit emission around 1.5 μm, which makes them perspective in various applications, such as telecommunications, material processing or defence. The conventionally used silica glass suffers from various drawbacks, such as low solubility of erbium ions or high phonon energy of the silica lattice, which limit the luminescence properties. The zinc-silicate glass-ceramics containing ZnO or Zn2SiO4 nanocrystals represent a suitable alternative. The incorporation of erbium ions into the nanocrystals should result in the enhancement of luminescence properties. In this work, we prepared a zinc-silicate glass-ceramic material containing Zn2SiO4 nanocrystals by the controlled heat treatment of a precursor glass. The luminescence properties of the 1.5 μm emission were measured and the influence of the crystallization on the near-infrared emission was evaluated.



ID: 234
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Non-linear amplification to 200 W of an electro-optic frequency comb with GHz tunable repetition rates

Hanyu Ye1, Florian Leroy2, Lilia Pontagnier1, Giorgio Santarelli1, Johan Boullet2, Eric Cormier1,3

1Laboratoire Photonique Numérique et Nanosciences (LP2N), UMR 5298, CNRS-IOGS-Université Bordeaux, 33400 Talence, France; 2ALPhANOV, Institut d’Optique d’Aquitaine, Rue François Mitterrand, 33400 Talence, France; 3Institut Universitaire de France (IUF), 1 Rue Descartes, 75231 Paris, France

We present a monolithic Yb-doped fiber laser system delivering 200 W average power of femtosecond pulses at tunable GHz repetition rates. The system is based on a GHz electro-optic (EO) frequency comb operating in the nonlinear regime. The EO comb pulses at 1 µm wavelength are initially pre-compressed to sub-2 ps, amplified to 2.5 W, and finally boosted to 200 W in a newly designed large-mode-area, Yb-doped photonic crystal fiber. Continuously tunable across 1-18 GHz, the picosecond pulses experience nonlinear propagation in the booster amplifier, leading to output pulses compressible down to several hundreds of femtoseconds. To push our system deeper into the nonlinear amplification regime, the pulse repetition rate is further reduced to 2 GHz, enabling significant spectral broadening at 200 W. Characterization reveals sub-200 fs duration after compression. The present EO-comb seeded nonlinear amplification system opens a new route to the development of high-power, tunable GHz-repetition-rate, femtosecond fiber lasers.



ID: 245
TOM 5 Optical Materials

New co-drawing strategies for the fabrication of glass/polymer fibers

Clément Strutynski, Moise Deroh, Rémi Bizot, Marianne Evrard, Frédéric Désévédavy, Grégory Gadret, Claire-Hélène Brachais, Bertrand Kibler, Frédéric Smektala

CNRS Laboratoire ICB, France

Among the different fundamental aspects that govern the design and development of elongated multimaterial structures via the preform-to-fiber technique, material association methodologies hold a crucial role. They greatly impact the number, complexity and possible combinations of functions that can be integrated within single fibers, thus defining their applicability. In this work, co-drawing strategies to produce monofilament microfibers from unique glass-polymer associations are discussed.



ID: 251
TOM 8 Ultrafast Optics

Chaos and synchronization within soliton molecules

Omri Gat1, Defeng Zou2, Youjian Song2, Philippe Grelu3

1The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel; 2Tianjin University, Tianjin, China; 3Université de Bourgogne, Laboratoire ICB, Dijon, France

We experimentally demonstrate the synchronization of regularly vibrating soliton molecules by means of an injected modulated signal. Such synchronization is analyzed in real time through the sensitive balanced optical correlation technique. We also unveil the existence of chaotic intra-molecular vibrations, to which we successfully apply a similar control strategy. These findings strengthen the hypothesis of internal dynamics of soliton molecules essentially ruled by a reduced number of degrees of freedom, allowing applicative prospects.



ID: 253
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Optical fiber flowmeter based on a michelson interferometer

Catarina S. Monteiro1,2, Margarida Ferreira1, João P. Mendes1,3, Luís C. C. Coelho1, Susana Silva1, Orlando Frazão1

1INESC TEC – Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Porto, Portugal; 2Department of Engineering Physics, Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto, Porto, Portugal; 3IMS/CIQUP - Institute of Molecular Sciences/Chemistry Research Unit, Faculty of Sciences of the University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

In this work, an optical fiber flowmeter based on a Michelson interferometer is presented. The Michelson interferometer uses a long period fiber grating (LPFG) to couple light to the cladding modes followed by a section of a GO-coated single mode fiber (SMF). By radiating the GO thin film, it will increase its temperature changing the effective refractive index of the optical cavity of the Michelson interferometer. By placing the sensor on a gas flow, its temperature surface will decrease in a proportional manner to the flow rate. The sensor was studied in both static and dynamic dry nitrogen flow, attaining an absolute sensitivity of 17.4 ± 0.8 pm/(L.min-1) and a maximum response time of 1.1 ± 0.4 s.



ID: 255
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Wavefront sensing for objective assessment of vision therapy efficacy: preliminary results

Jessica Gomes, Kishor Sapkota, Sandra Franco

Centre of Physics, University of Minho, Portugal

The aim of this study was to use wavefront sensing to objectively evaluate the effects of vision therapy in subjects with insufficiency (AI) and infacility of accommodation (AINF). Aberrometry was performed with a Shack-Hartmann wavefront aberrometer for different accommodative stimuli in one subject with AI and one with AINF before and after treatment with vision therapy (VT). A control subject received a placebo treatment. Real-time accommodative response, accommodation and disaccommodation reaction time, accommodative microfluctuations and root mean square of higher order aberrations were compared before and after VT/placebo. VT was effective and wavefront sensing can be used to detect AI and AINF and evaluate these subjects during VT.



ID: 257
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Real-time wavefront aberrometry in subjects with accommodative excess

Jessica Gomes, Kishor Sapkota, Sandra Franco

Centre of physics, University of Minho, Portugal

The purpose of this study was to use real-time wavefront aberrometry to detect accommodative excess (AE) and to analyse the optical quality of the eye in subjects with this dysfunction. AE was detected from the accommodative response obtained by real-time wavefront aberrometry. These subjects had a significant accommodative lead to all stimuli and had difficulty relaxing accommodation. The root mean square (RMS) of high order aberrations (HOA) was higher in subjects with AE for lower stimulus and for disaccommodation than in the control group. However, the subjects with AE showed a decrease in the RMS of HOA with an increase in accommodative response. Primary spherical aberration tended to become more negative with accommodation in both subjects and there was no difference between the groups. Real-time wavefront aberrometry can be used as an objective method to detect accommodative excess.



ID: 267
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Enhancement of quantum dot fluorescence by a metal nanoparticle/porous silicon microcavity hybrid system

Evelyn Granizo1, Irina Kriukova1,2, Pavel Samokhvalov1, Igor Nabiev2

1Laboratory of Nano-Bioengineering, National Research Nuclear University MEPhI (Moscow Engineering Physics Institute), 115409 Moscow, Russia; 2Laboratoire de Recherche en Nanosciences (LRN-4682), Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne, 51100 Reims, France

Enhancement of quantum dot (QD) fluorescence in a hybrid system of a porous silicon microcavity (pSiMC) and silver nanoplatelets (AgNPs) has been estimated using numerical simulation. The system was simulated as a periodic unit cell made of a pSiMC with a resonant wavelength peak at 605 nm, an AgNP with a resonance at 604 nm and a quantum dot (QD) with an emission peak at 605 nm. For comparison, simulations were performed for an AgNP and a QD in a reference single-layered system with a high refractive index. The QD fluorescence was enhanced in the AgNP/pSiMC hybrid system, mainly due to the higher excitation rate.



ID: 273
TOM 8 Ultrafast Optics

Hibiscus: simulator for the development of control strategies for coherent beam combining lasers with Pistil technique

Thomas Rousseaux1, Jérôme Primot1, Jean-Christophe Chanteloup2, Bastien Rouzé1, Cindy Bellanger1

1Université Paris-Saclay, ONERA, Optiques et Techniques Associées, 91123, Palaiseau, France; 2LULI, CNRS, École Polytechnique, CEA, Sorbonne Université, Institut Polytechnique de Paris-91120

CBC (Coherent Beam Combining) is a key technology for the realisation of intense lasers. In this context, PISTIL (PISton and TILt interferometry), a precise metrology tool for measuring segmented wave surfaces, has been developed and used in particular to characterise and diagnose CBC ultrafast and digital laser in the framework of the XCAN (X Coherent Amplification Network) project at the École Polytechnique. We propose here to use it in a way to help the optimisation of control techniques by including PISTIL in an XCAN type CBC laser simulator. This will allow an easy tuning of the control laws, outside the clean rooms in which these large lasers are deployed and without the need to start them up.



ID: 274
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Dynamics of kerr frequency combs in fiber cavity Brillouin lasers

Moise Deroh, Erwan Lucas, Bertrand Kibler

Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne, UMR 6303 CNRS, Université de Bourgogne (UB), Dijon, France, France

We investigate coherent Kerr combs generation via Brillouin lasing in a non-reciprocal cavity. This approach offers adjustable repetition rates and enhanced coherence. A numerical model is presented that accounts for the interplay between Brillouin scattering, Kerr effect, and cavity resonant feedback. Through quantitative agreement with experiments, our study highlights the importance of mode-pulling effects in setting the comb’s dynamics, which had been overlooked inprevious fiber experiments. Finally, we discuss limitations and suggest scaling laws for these systems.



ID: 279
TOM 1 Silicon Photonics and Integrated Optics

Control of the flow of light in the non-adiabatic regime

Anastasiia Sheveleva, Mathieu Leonardo, Christophe Finot, Pierre Colman

ICB Laboratory, UMR CNRS6303 - University of Burgundy, France

We demonstrate that coupled waveguides systems can be operated in the so called non-adiabatic

regime. In this regime, light can undergo transitions between different steady states in a manner analogue to the transition of an electron between energy levels. This approach contrasts with the previous concepts in integrated photonics that rely exclusively on the adiabatic control of the flow of light. We show in particular that abrupt changes of the control parameters are not required to create such non-adiabatic transitions. The constraint for adiabaticity being lifted, light can now be manipulated optimally. And the analogy between the time evolution of a quantum system and the propagation of light in a waveguides array can be pushed one step further.



ID: 283
Focused Sessions 1: Specialty optical fibers

Dispersion-shifted tellurite fibers for the 2-3 µm waveband

Esteban Serrano, Marianne Evrard, Clément Strutynski, Frédéric Désévédavy, Grégory Gadret, Jean-Charles Jules, Bertrand Kibler, Frédéric Smektala

Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne, UMR6303 CNRS-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 9 avenue Alain Savary, 21078 Dijon Cedex, France

We numerically investigate dispersive and nonlinear properties of step-index tellurite fibers from detailed measurements of refractive indices for two tellurite-glass systems employed in fiber manufacturing. In particular, two typical step-index configurations are analyzed, namely weak and strong index differences between core and cladding glasses. We reveal that a wide range of dispersion-shifted features for tellurite fibers can be obtained in the 2 –3 μm range, and we show the potential application of such dispersion-engineered fibers for nonlinear wavelength converters between near- and mid-infrared regions.



ID: 290
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Polarization attraction process in a dual-Omnipolarizer

Nicolas Berti1, Massimiliano Guasoni2, Julien Fatome1

1Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne, France; 2Optoelectronics Research Centre, UK

In this work, we investigate the nonlinear phenomenon of self-attraction of light state-of-polarization in optical fibers by means of dual-Omnipolarizers. More precisely, we compare the performance in terms of polarization attraction efficiency of two different systems: The first configuration relies on a series of two successive Omnipolarizers, whereas the second system includes an imbricated Omnipolarizer into the feedback loop of the main device. Our study reveals that for the same budget of power, the cascading of two Omnipolarizers allows to improve the performance of the polarization attraction phenomenon, leading to an output degree-of-polarization close to unity for any arbitrary polarized input signal.



ID: 293
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

All-optical control of ultrafast plasmon resonances in the pulse-driven extraordinary optical transmission

Hira Asif1, Mehmet Emre Taşgın2, Ramazan Şahin1

1Department of Physics, Akdeniz University Antalya Turkey, Turkiye; 2Institute of Nuclear Sciences, Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey

Understanding the ultrafast processes at their natural-time scale is crucial for controlling and manipulating nanoscale optoelectronic devices under light-matter interaction. In this study, we demonstrate that ultrafast plasmon resonances, attributed to the phenomenon of Extraordinary Optical Transmission (EOT), can be significantly modified by tuning the spectral and temporal properties of the ultrashort light pulse. In this scheme, all-optical active tuning governs spatial and temporal enhancement of plasmon oscillations in the EOT system without device customization. We analyze the spectral and temporal evolution of the system analytically through coupled harmonic oscillator model and discuss time-resolved spectral and spatial dynamics of plasmon modes through 3D-FDTD simulation method and wavelet transform. Our results show that optical tuning of oscillation time, intensity, and spectral properties of propagating and localized plasmon modes yields a 3-fold enhancement in the EOT signal. The active tuning of the EOT sensor through ultrashort light pulses pave the way for the development of on-chip photonic devices employing high-resolution imaging and sensing of abundant atomic and molecular systems.



ID: 294
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Time-division multiplexing of Mbit/s data-packets within Gbit/s data sequences through nonlinear temporal focusing

Julien Fatome1, Miro Erkintalo2, Stéphane Coen2

1Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne, France; 2The University of Auckland, New Zealand

In this work, we report on an all-optical, real-time, nonlinear temporal compression technique based on a counter-propagating degenerate four-wave mixing interaction in birefringent optical fibres. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate the extreme temporal focusing and interleaving of a 10-Mbit/s data packet into a 10-Gbit/s data sequence, with record temporal compression factors ranging from 3 to 4 orders of magnitude and including non-trivial on-demand time-reversal capabilities. Our approach is scalable to different photonic platforms and offers great promise for ultrafast arbitrary optical waveform generation and related applications, while enabling the compression of THz-bandwidth optical signals from low-cost, low-bandwidth optical waveform generators.



ID: 300
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

EO solution to overcome the transient regime of a “cavity dumped” UV source, or how to work in chopped mode outside the transient regime ?

Alban Petitjean, Olivier Musset

Université de Bourgogne, France

The "cavity dumped" laser architecture is a very efficient solution for having a high-efficiency pulsed laser source with a shorter pulse duration than a classic Q-Switch laser architecture. This solution makes it possible to obtain laser beams of almost constant pulse duration independently of the repetition rate and the pumping rate and to obtain very good conversion efficiency at 2w and 3w. Unfortunately, this architecture suffers from a handicap with a duration of the transient regime that can exceed ten milliseconds. The very long duration of this transient state makes this architecture incompatible with inherently transient applications such as marking or laser micro-machining. We propose here an electro-optical solution to decorrelate the transient state specific to the CD architecture and that of introduced by the application.



ID: 308
TOM 8 Ultrafast Optics

Dynamical systems of oscillating ultrashort pulse pairs

Saar Spector1, Aurelien Coillet2, Pierre Colman2, Philippe Grelu2, Omri Gat1

1Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel; 2Université de Bourgogne, France

We propose a theoretical method to model the complex phenomenon of oscillating ultrashort pulse pair molecules. Using a phenomenological viewpoint, we construct effective dynamical systems, whose degrees of freedom are the inter-pulse timing and overall phase. The effective dynamical system is characterized by a limit cycle attractor that is fit to the experimentally measured soliton oscillation using data-driven methods. Good agreement is achieved between the dynamical system orbits and experimental observations made in a mode-locked fiber laser.



ID: 313
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

3D printing of quantum dot embedded polymer nanowires for patterning to triangular-delta and Bayer

Jaeyeon Pyo

Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute, Korea, Republic of (South Korea)

This contribution presents a method for producing nanoscale color pixels for high-resolution displays using 3D printing of vertically freestanding nanostructures containing red, green, or blue light-emitting quantum dots (QDs). Traditional methods for producing pixels suffer from decreased brightness and pixel density at higher densities due to the reduced volume, but our 3D printing method allows for individual control of brightness by adjusting pixel height in 3D, resulting in a two-fold increase in brightness without changing lateral dimensions. We demonstrate sub-micrometer pixels representing primary colors at a super-high density, enabling image patterns with a pixel resolution of 8,400 ppi and individual modulation of sub-pixels with a possible pixel resolution of 5,600 ppi in triangular-delta and Bayer type designs. The method can be applied to displays, information storage, cryptography, and image sensors. The 3D printing method is a versatile approach for photonic research and has potential for contributing to the development of a range of applications.



ID: 317
TOM 8 Ultrafast Optics

Generation of high repetition rate THz radiation at the mill-watt-level via optical rectification in an enhancement cavity

Edoardo Suerra1,2, Francesco Canella3,2, Dario Giannotti4,2, Simone Cialdi1,2, Gianluca Galzerano3,2

1Dipartimento di Fisica “Aldo Pontremoli”, Università degli Studi di Milano, via Celoria 16, 20133 Milan, Italy; 2Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Milano, via Celoria 16, 20133 Milan, ItalyItaly; 3Istituto di Fotonica e Nanotecnologie - CNR, piazza Leonardo da Vinci 32, 20133 Milan, Italy; 4Dipartimento di Fisica, Politecnico di Milano, piazza Leonardo da Vinci 32, 20133 Milan, Italy

We propose an experimental method for the generation of coherent terahertz radiation in the spectral region between 0.2 THz and 2 THz, with a high repetition rate of nearly 100 MHz, and with an average power at the milliwatt level. An Ytterbium-doped mode locking laser is amplified to 60 W, and pulses are stacked into an optical cavity up to 750 W. There, they interact with a Gallium Phosphide crystal producing THz radiation via optical rectification. With the cavity enhanced configuration, we show that more than one order of magnitude can be gained with respect to simply focalize the 60 W beam into the GaP crystal.



ID: 330
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Soliton-number measurement in lossy waveguides

David Castelló-Lurbe1,2, Christian Cuadrado-Laborde3, Enrique Silvestre1, Antonio Díez1, Miguel V. Andrés1

1University of Valencia (UV), Spain; 2Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Belgium; 3Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario (Argentina)

A general technique for obtaining the soliton number, and hence the nonlinear coefficient, in waveguides with high dispersion and loss is derived and demonstrated numerically and experimentally in a kilometer-long standard silica fiber pumped close to 2 µm.



ID: 336
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Non-local property of single-photon states: illustration with spontaneously emitted photon from a Hydrogen atom

Maxime Federico, Hans Rudolf Jauslin

Université de Bourgogne, France

We discuss a new proof of the non-locality of single-photons using a concrete physical observable such as the local energy density. As an illustration of this non-locality, we compute the mean value of the local energy observable for the spontaneous emission from a Hydrogen atom. We find that, in the subspace of single-photon states, the mean value of the local energy density observable is non-zero everywhere and decreases as a power of the distance.



ID: 342
TOM 3 BioPhotonics

Broadband CARS high-throughput single-cell imaging

Ryan Muddiman, Bryan Hennelly

Maynooth University, Ireland

Broadband Coherent anti-Stokes Raman Scattering (BCARS) enables the whole vibrational spectrum of cytologically prepared samples to be obtained using a hyperspectral raster scan approach. This technique has the potential to enable high-throughput automated detection of cell abnormalities. Images are distorted by the non-resonant background which requires a treatment for proper analysis. Using statistical denoising and phase retrieval returns Raman spectra similar to that of a spontaneous Raman measurement. Here, we present our work using this method for single-cell imaging of PEO1 ovarian adenocarcinoma cells prepared with the ThinPrep processor which enables label-free Raman cytology.



ID: 343
Focused Sessions 4: Machine-Learning for Optics and Photonic Computing for AI

Raman signal extraction from BCARS intensity measurements using deep learning with a prior excitation profile

Ryan Muddiman1, Kevin O'Dwyer1, Charles Camp2, Bryan Hennelly1

1Maynooth University, Ireland; 2Biosystems and Biomaterials Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD, USA

Broadband Coherent anti-Stokes Raman Scattering (BCARS) microscopy is a useful technique for chemical analysis and allows the full vibrational fingerprint spectrum of a specimen to be obtained in milliseconds. A major drawback to this technique is the presence of the non-resonant background response producing interference which prevents classical spectral analysis of the sample. Using a convolutional autoencoder and measurements of the laser characteristics, we have shown that it is possible to remove this background without requiring supervision, as is typically required for conventional removal methods. This approach therefore simplifies the analysis of hyperspectral images obtained with BCARS.



ID: 345
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Using an inexpensive module for Quantitative Phase Imaging

Fan Xin, Ryan Muddiman, Bryan Hennelly

Maynooth University, Ireland

We report on modular implementation of digital holography that we recently proposed. The module is designed such that it may be added to an existing brightfield microscope's image port for digital holographic microscopy functionality. The proposed system is modular, portable, and cost-effective and not require path-length realignment when changing samples. The square in-line Mach-Zender architecture is used and the off-axis condition is achieved using two sets of wedge prism pairs; this approach offers advantages over other Mach-Zender nearly common-path modules, particularly in path length matching of object and reference wavefields for low-temporal coherence sources. Additionally, the proposed system allows for continuous variation of the tilt angles of the object and reference wavefields incident on the sensor, making it readily adaptable to any microscope and camera.



ID: 346
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Polarized spectroscopy of Sm3+ ions in monoclinic KGd(WO4)2 crystals

Amandine Baillard1, Pavel Loiko1, Daniel Rytz2, Sebastian Schwung2, Anatoly Pavlyuk3, Aleksei Kornienko4, Elena Dunina4, Liudmila Fomicheva5, Michaël Fromager1, Alain Braud1, Patrice Camy1

1Centre de Recherche sur les Ions, les Matériaux et la Photonique (CIMAP), UMR 6252 CEA-CNRS-ENSICAEN, Université de Caen Normandie, 6 Blvd Maréchal Juin, 14050 Caen, France; 2EOT GmbH, Struthstraße 2, D-55743 Idar-Oberstein, Germany; 3Nikolaev Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, SB of RAS, 3 Lavrentyev Ave., 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia; 4Vitebsk State Technological University, 72 Moskovskaya Ave., 210035 Vitebsk, Belarus; 5Belarusian State University of Informatics and Radioelectronics, 6 Brovka St., Minsk 220027, Belarus

We report on a polarization-resolved spectroscopic study of Sm3+-doped monoclinic KGd(WO4)2

crystals. The transition probabilities for Sm3+ ions were calculated using a modified Judd-Ofelt theory. For the 4G5/2 → 6H9/2 transition in the red spectral range, the stimulated-emission cross-section is 5.59×10-21 cm² at 649.0 nm (for light polarization E || Np) and the luminescence lifetime of the 4G5/2 state is 719 μs (0.4 at.% Sm3+-doping). Sm:KGd(WO4)2 is promising for orange and red lasers.



ID: 352
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Large period spiking and bursting in an excitable system with memory

Bertrand Braeckeveldt1, Kevin Peters2, Bart Verdonschot2, Said Rodriguez2, Bjorn Maes1

1Micro- and Nanophotonic Materials Group, Research Institute for Materials Science and Engineering, University of Mons, 20 Place du Parc, Mons B-7000, Belgium; 2Center for Nanophotonics, AMOLF, Science Park 104, 1098 XG Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Excitability in dynamical systems refers to the ability to transition from a resting stationary state to a spiking state when a parameter is varied. It is the mechanism behind spike generation in neurons. Optical non-linear resonators can be excitable systems, but they usually present a fast response compared to neuronal systems, and they prove difficult to observe experimentally. We propose investigating optical resonators with delayed Kerr effects, specifically in two different geometries: an oil-filled single-mode cavity with thermo-optical nonlinearity, and two coupled, symmetrically driven cavities. When the Kerr effect is delayed, even a single cavity exhibits excitability. However, we show that it suffers from limitations on the thermo-optical relaxation time in order to be realized experimentally. We overcome these limitations using the geometry with coupled cavities, where the thermo-optical relaxation time acts as a memory. This slow variable enables to tailor the spiking frequency and it mimics neuronal behaviours by enabling large-period spiking.



ID: 353
TOM 2 Adaptive and Freeform Optics

Following the Flux in diffracted fields – An efficient numerical method for tracing the Eikonal function

Qin Yu, Ryan Muddiman, Bryan Hennelly

Maynooth University, Ireland

We report on our recently developed method for tracing lines of flux in three-dimensional diffracted wavefields using an approach we call ‘non-linear ray tracing’ but which can be more accurately described as tracing the lines of flux in the context of the Eikonal function. These ‘rays’ navigate through the diffracted field guided by the derivative of the phase at a sequence of successive points. Our approach is based on the Angular Spectrum method, a numerical algorithm that accurately and efficiently calculates diffracted fields for numerical apertures <0.7. This is used to generate a three-dimensional grid of complex wavefield samples in the focal region, followed by tracing the flux through this volume. The ray propagates in a straight line between two consecutive planes within the volume; the phase derivative is calculated at each plane to direct the ray on the next step of its journey. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach by generating results for focused laser beams with TEM00 and TEM01 laser profiles. We also simulate the effects of optical aberrations, described by Zernike polynomials, on the three-dimensional focused wavefield. Our non-linear ray tracing method provides a powerful and efficient approach for tracing lines of flux through complex three-dimensional wavefields, offering an exciting new tool for understanding these complex systems.



ID: 376
Focused Sessions 4: Machine-Learning for Optics and Photonic Computing for AI

Multi-channel free space optical convolutions

Alexander Song1,2, Sai Nikhilesh Murty Kottapalli1,2, Peer Fischer1,2

1Max Planck Institute for Medical Research, Germany; 2Institute for Molecular Systems Engineering and Advanced Materials, University of Heidelberg, Germany

Convolutional layers are a critical feature of modern neural networks and require significant computational resources. In response, optical accelerators have been developed as a low-energy, high-bandwidth approach for performing large-scale convolutions. We extend these methods to act on many input channels each with their own set of convolutional kernels. We simulate the performance of this system with ray-tracing and evaluate its performance.



ID: 378
TOM 3 BioPhotonics

Changes in the Observed Shape of H6TPPS J-Aggerates by the Polarisation of the Incoming Light

Alon Krause, Tchiya Zar, Adi Salomon

Bar Ilan University, Israel

Abstract. Samples of H6TPPS J aggregates and bundles, deposited on glass and aligned under nitrogen flow, were measured in a 2-photon microscopy setup. Changes in the polarization state of the incoming laser have shown a difference in the resulting 2-photon scanning of the same measured sample, revelling otherwise hidden features. In addition, tracing the response of certain areas under different polarisation can provide information about the arrangement of the dipoles in that area. This shows the significant role of polarisation in 2-photon measurement, and the need to consider such effects in the microscopy of biological samples.



ID: 389
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Light transmission and reflection in amorphous self-uniform dielectric networks.

Abraham de Jesus Aguilar Uribe1, Marian Florescu2, Frank Scheffold1

1University Of Fribourg,Fribourg, Switzerland.; 2University of Surrey, Guildford, GU2 7XH, UK.

Certain amorphous dielectric materials can prevent the propagation of electromagnetic waves within a certain frequency range, i.e., they exhibit a photonic band gap where the density of state is zero. Materials of this kind are promising for fundamental physics and numerous technological applications. Little has been known about how waves penetrate such material, are reflected, and propagate through the material near but outside the bandgap. In a recent paper, our group proposed a solution to this problem, where we also consider the occurrence of Anderson localization of light [1]. Here we present experimental results on light transmission and reflection in amorphous self-uniform dielectric networks [2] made with direct laser writing. We compare the experimental data with the model.

[1] Scheffold, F., Haberko, J., Magkiriadou, S., & Froufe-Pérez, L. S. (2022). Transport through Amorphous Photonic Materials with Localization and Bandgap Regimes. Phys. Rev. Lett., 129, 157402. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.129.157402

[2] Sellers, S.R., Man, W., Sahba, S. and Florescu, M., 2017. Local self-uniformity in photonic networks. Nature communications, 8(1), p.14439.



ID: 392
TOM 1 Silicon Photonics and Integrated Optics

Beam steering experiments through an optical phased array with wavelength tuning

Sidra Tul Muntaha1,2, Ari Hokkanen1, Mikko Harjanne1, Matteo Cherchi3, Matthieu Roussey2, Timo Aalto1

1VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland; 2University of Eastern Finland; 3Xanadu, Canada

In this paper, we have demonstrated the beam steering experiments with the help of our optical phased array devices. The lateral beam steering has been showed successfully with the wavelength through the tunable laser source. The number of output channels were 512 and the array width was kept more than a millimeter with a 2-µm pitch. The beam steering angle has been measured as 45° and the beam movement was 1°/nm. As the chip does not collimate the beam vertically, so, a commercial collimating lens has been used in the vertical direction.



ID: 402
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Development and Characterization of an EUV/soft X-ray Single-Photon Sensitive sCMOS Camera

Nursulton Abdurakhimov1,2,3, Conrad Friedrich1

1greateyes GmbH, Germany; 2Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy; 3Freie Universität Berlin

We are developing and characterizing an EUV/soft X-ray sensitive sCMOS-sensor based detector suitable for high repetition rate imaging and spectroscopy as well as single photon detection experiments



ID: 404
TOM 3 BioPhotonics

Bio-sensing using optically trapped NanoDiamonds with NV-centers

Arthur Fabien Antoine Dervillez

DTU, Denmark

This study explores the quantum properties and fluorescence properties of optically trapped nanodiamonds (NDs) with nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers. We focus on T1-relaxometry measurements and fluorescence-spectra under varying green laser powers, while considering the IR laser's influence. The study also optimizes laser sequences for efficient NDs trapping within cells, ensuring minimized effects on fluorescence and T1 properties. With NDs' unique photostability, biocompatibility, and sensitivity to magnetic fields, our findings suggest new modalities for biophotonics applications such as cellular imaging or sensing, pushing forward the rapidly evolving field.



ID: 410
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Development of single photon source based on micro-ring resonator for quantum memories

Juan Samuel Sebastián Duran Gómez2, Mauricio Gómez Robles1, Patricia Tavares Ramírez2, Gerardo Jose Rodriguez Becerra2, Rafael Salas Montiel1, Roberto Ramírez Alarcón2

1Université de Technologie de Troyes, France; 2Centro de Investigaciones en Optica, México

We design a photon pair source with emission at 606 nm and 3.98 MHz linewidth, which matches the spectral properties of praseodymium ions. To reduce the linewidth the use of cavity-enhanced spontaneous four-wave mixing was proposed. The designed integrated source is suitable for praseodymium quantum memories.



ID: 411
Special Session on “Opto-electronic Nanotechnologies and Microsystems” (ONM)

Scattering spectroscopy on single plasmonic nanoparticles using a confocal darkfield setup

Mees Dieperink, Francesca Scalerandi, Patrick Spaeth, Wiebke Albrecht

AMOLF, Department of Sustainable Energy Materials, Science Park 104, 1098XG, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

We demonstrate how to measure scattering spectra of single plasmonic nanoparticles using a confocal darkfield setup. We give an overview of considerations and problems we encountered when employing a darkfield technique based on filtering illumination under low angles instead of the conventional high-angle filtering by darkfield objectives.



ID: 413
Focused Sessions 1: Specialty optical fibers

Mid-infrared supercontinuum source and evanescent wave spectroscopy based on multiple tapered sections of a singleoptical chalcogenide glass rod

Damien Bailleul1, Esteban Serrano1, David Le Coq2, Catherine Boussard-Plédel2, Frédéric Désévédavy1, Frédéric Smektala1, Bertrand Kibler1

1Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Carnot de Bourgogne, UMR 6303 CNRS - UBFC Dijon, France; 2Institut des Sciences Chimiques de Rennes, UMR CNRS 6226, Rennes, France

Mid-infrared supercontinuum sources are particularly important for identifying and characterizing molecules and materials through spectroscopy, thus enabling key applications. We here demonstrate the possibility of combining both mid-IR supercontinuum generation and evanescent wave spectroscopy in a single chalcogenide fiber device by means of heat-and-draw processes to manage linear and nonlinear wave-guiding properties.



ID: 423
Special Session on “Opto-electronic Nanotechnologies and Microsystems” (ONM)

Vo2 Tungsten doped film IR perfect absorber

Maria Cristina Ceneda1, Daniele Ceneda1, Daniele Scirè3, Mauro Mosca3, Dominique Persano Adorno4, Sina Abedini Dereshgi2, Koray Aydin2, Roberto Macaluso3, Roberto Li Voti1, Concita Sibilia1, Tiziana Cesca5, Giovanni Mattei5, Marco Centini1

1La Sapienza, Italy; 2Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois; 3Department of Engineering, University of Palermo, Viale delle Scienze, Palermo,Italy; 4Department of Physics and Chemistry “E. Segré”, University of Palermo, Viale delle Scienze, Palermo,Italy; 55 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Padova, via Marzolo, Padova, Italy

We investigated infrared reflectivity of undoped and Tungsten (W) doped Vanadium dioxide (VO2) films at varying temperatures. Undoped VO2 exhibited a clear phase transition at 100°C, achieving near 0% reflectivity, or perfect light absorption. As W doping concentration increased, the phase-transition temperature decreased, maintaining the zero-reflectivity condition. Only a 0.75% W doping enabled room temperature perfect absorption without heating the film.



ID: 426
Focused Sessions 2: Structured light

Generalized 3D polarization field in structured beams

Miroslav Sulc1,2, Jean-Christophe Gayde3, Krystof Polak1,3

1Technical University of Liberec, Czech Republic; 2Institute of Plasma Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic; 3CERN – European Organization for Nuclear Research, Switzerland

A number of experiments confirm the appearance of longitudinal components of the electric or magnetic field in parts of the space of the optical beam. The aim of this paper is to show that this local appearance is not spatially confined, and can propagate to infinity in the form of structured beams. The polarization distribution in the paraxial space of the beam can be explained using a model of a polarization field that arises behind an infinite axicon. The electric field oscillates in a local position along a 3D ellipse and can create a wave in space. The orientation of the ellipse and its ellipticity depend on the position. Analytical solutions are shown to describe the polarization of the electric and magnetic fields behind the axicon, which satisfy the wave equation for different polarization states of the input beam such as radial, azimuthal, linear, and circular. This infinite axicon model example can be extended to describe paraxial structured beams of finite size but infinite distance propagation range. These beams have been generated using optical elements with huge optical aberrations and experimental results, demonstrating some of the beam properties, are presented.



ID: 428
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Bound states in doubly resonant optical parametric oscillator with Kerr nonlinearity

Brahim Baydi1,2, Saliya Coulibaly1, François Léo2, Carlos Mas Arabi2

1Université de Lille, CNRS, UMR 8523-PhLAM-Physique des Lasers Atomes et Molécules, F-59000 Lille, France; 2Service OPERA-photonique, Université libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.), 50 Avenue F. D. Roosevelt, CP 194/5, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium

We theoretically study the interaction between two parametrically driven solitons in a doubly resonant optical parametric oscillator with non-negligible Kerr nonlinearity. We show that two solitons can interact through the depletion of the pump in the presence of a high walk-off between signal and pump, leading to the formation of bound states.



ID: 429
TOM 5 Optical Materials

Β-ga2o3 deposited via Μοcvd for mid-Infrared polarization control

Daniele Ceneda1, Marco Centini1, Sina Abedini Dereshgi2, Koray Aydin2, Maria Cristina Larciprete1

1La Sapienza, Italy; 2Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, United States

We performed infrared optical characterization of polycrystalline β-Ga2O3 films, in the 10-18 μm range, deposited by metal organic chemical vapor deposition on sapphire substrates. Our results show that it is possible to obtain a dominant β-phase film, with a well-defined, normal to surface z-axis orientation. These results are confirmed by reflection spectra performed at 45° incidence angle which reveals a z-phonon Reststrahlen band as a function of the incident field linear polarization.



ID: 434
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Diagonalization of the quantum plasmonic model for one-dimensional metallic slab

Georgii Semin, Stéphane Guerin, Hans-Rudolf Jauslin

Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Laboratoire ICB, France

In this work, we investigate a microscopic model for a quantum electromagnetic field interacting with a linear nonmagnetic metallic medium. We obtain the diagonal form of the Hamiltonian of the model and find the exact values of the creation-annihilation coefficients. Using these results, we compare the decay rate of an atom located near the metallic one-dimensional slab with the results in the literature.



ID: 442
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Direct measurement of an ultrafast sub-bandwidth-limited signal in mid-infrared quantum cascade lasers

Barbara Schneider, Alexander Dikopoldsev, Philipp Täschler, Filippos Kapsalidis, Mattias Beck, Jérôme Faist

ETH Zürich, Switzerland

Frequency comb lasers with fast gain recovery times naturally favor the emission of frequency modulated periodic signals, which are useful for multiple applications in spectroscopy and communications. Models and phase measurements predict an ultrashort strong intensity spike at the instantaneous frequency discontinuity of the cavity cycle.

Here we experimentally study the ultrashort spike of fast-gain frequency modulated combs through direct upconversion sampling, and measure a width below that of a transform-limited pulse. Specifically, we demonstrate a mid-infrared quantum cascade laser which inherently lases in a frequency modulated comb and produces a spike with full-width at half-maximum below 600 fs, which is below the Fourier-limit derived from the corresponding spectrum. We believe these ultrashort spikes can be highly beneficial for sub-bandwidth time domain measurements. Using mean-field theory based simulations, we confirm the occurrence of such features as well as further optimize our system for going even further below the Fourier-limit.



ID: 451
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Fourier-domain phase retardation vortex measurement

Petr Schovánek1, Michal Baránek1, Petr Bouchal2,3, Zdeněk Bouchal1

1Palacký University Olomouc, Czech Republic; 2Institute of Physical Engineering, Czech Republic; 3Central European Institute of Technology, Czech Republic

Optical vortices have found a wide range of applications thanks to their helical phase topology allowing to carry the orbital angular momentum. In this work, self-interfering vortex beams are utilized in a new single-shot holographic method for the circular phase retardation measurement. The vortices carrying information about the phase retardation introduced between two orthogonal circular polarization modes are generated by the spin to orbital angular momentum conversion. The phase retardation is stored in off-axis holographic records acquired in a common-path setup using a geometric-phase grating. In the proposed method, the circular phase retardation is reconstructed in the Fourier domain, surpassing the measurement precision provided by methods restoring the retardation from the rotation of a Double-Helix Point Spread Function (DH PSF). The developed method can be adapted for application to polarimetry, orientation imaging and diagnostics of nano-emitters.



ID: 463
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Surface-emitting THz quantum cascade laser frequency comb with tunable external mirror dispersion compensation

Valerio Digiorgio, Urban Senica, Paolo Micheletti, Mattias Beck, Jérôme Faist, Giacomo Scalari

ETH Zürich, Switzerland

We present a surface emitting THz quantum cascade laser frequency comb with an adjustable chromatic dispersion compensation via a mechanically tunable GTI cavity. Surface emission and high optical feedback into the laser cavity are achieved by a planarized ridge waveguide design with low reflectivity facets and two broadband patch array antennas for coupling to an external mirror (back side) and for power extraction (front side). We demonstrate direct and reproducible manipulation of the frequency comb state, specifically the comb stability and beatnote frequency tuning, by controlling the position of an external movable mirror.



ID: 469
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Manufacturing reflection holographic couplers for see-through applications recorded in photopolymers without prisms: an experimental validation

Joan Josep Sirvent-Verdú1, Juan Carlos Bravo1, Jaume Colomina-Martínez1, Carla Piñol-Galera1, Guillem Nájar1, Cristian Neipp1,2, Jorge Francés1,2, Sergi Gallego1,2, Augusto Beléndez1,2

1Instituto Universitario de Física Aplicada a las Ciencias Y las Tecnologías. University of Alicante, Spain,; 2Departamento de Física, Ingeniería de Sistemas y Teoría de la Señal, University of Alicante, Spain.

In the present work, the viability of a novel recording geometry to produce reflection holographic couplers has been analyzed. Recalling the idea of previous works, photopolymers are used as the recording material, as they are well-suited for the intended see-through application. Moreover, Kogelnik’s theory fundamentals give us the proper background to examine the proposed design, where no prisms or microlenses arrays are used. Aiming to support the analysis, we provide experimental evidence that the produced gratings exhibit the correct properties to work as a coupler.



ID: 470
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Design of mid-Infrared supercontinuum generation in lithium niobate on sapphire waveguide through lateral leakage engineering

Kokou Firmin Fiaboe1,2, Alberto Della Torre1, Arnan Mitchell2, Christelle Monat1, Christian Grillet1, Thach Nguyen2

1ECOLE CENTRALE DE LYON, France; 2RMIT University, Australia

We study the lateral leakage of a silicon nitride loaded lithium niobate on sapphire waveguide in the mid-infrared regime. We then combine lateral leakage and dispersion engineering to numerically demonstrate mid-infrared supercontinuum generation extending from 2400nm to 5000nm



ID: 476
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Kerr solitons in high-Q integrated Fabry-Pérot microresonators

Thibault Wildi1, Mahmoud Gaafar1, Thibault Voumard1, Markus Ludwig1, Tobias Herr1,2

1Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, Notkestr. 85, 22607 Hamburg, Germany; 2Physics Department, Universität Hamburg UHH, Luruper Chaussee 149, 22761 Hamburg, Germany

Disspative Kerr Solitons are generated in an integrated standing wave Fabry-Pérot microresonator. Enabled by synthetic anomalous dispersion provided by a pair of Photonic Crystal Reflectors (PCR) forming a high-Q cavity, the generated soliton pulses exhibit a unique spectral profile extending beyond the PCRs’ bandgap.



ID: 477
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Multimodal imaging using tellurite highly nonlinear multimode fibers

Claire-Hélène Brachais1, Marianne Evrard1, Anthony Maldonado1, Esteban Serrano1, Clément Strutynski1, Frédéric Désévédavy1, Vincent Couderc2, Grégory Gadret1, Maggy Colas3, Sylvain Danto4, Thierry Cardinal4, Frédéric Smektala1

1ICB, France; 2XLIM, France; 3IRCER, France; 4ICMCB, France

Since the development of the first fibroscope in the late nineteenth century, the use of innovating glass fibers has opened promising perspectives for medical applications particularly in the domain of multimodal imagery[1]. In this work, tellurite glasses have been used to design step-index optical fibers with a rectangular core-section for supercontinuum generation in the near infrared domain. The tellurite glasses selection and the fibers manufacturing by the stack-and-draw process will be presented. Characterizations performed on bulk samples and fibers will also be detailed[2]. The spectral broadening, which is obtained in this work in a short fiber sample, is used for imaging mouse kidney cells, labelled with three different fluorochromes, by means of two and three-photon absorption. Despite the multimode nature of the output beam, clear images of tubules, actin and nucleus are collected with a spatial resolution down to 1.2 µm[3].



ID: 479
TOM 6 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics

Broadband light generation in nonlinear silicon nitride strip-loaded lithium niobate waveguides

Marina Raevskaia1,2, Alberto Della Torre1, Christian Grillet1, Andreas Boes2,3, Arnan Mitchell2, Christelle Monat1

1Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon (INL), ), UMR 5270, Ecole Centrale Lyon, Université de Lyon, France; 2School of Engineering, RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia; 3School of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia

This work demonstrates SiN strip-loaded lithium niobate waveguides with nonlinear optical properties, focusing on their performance when pumped at telecom wavelength. Experimental results show second and third harmonic generation in periodically poled SiN/LiNbO3. Furthermore, simulations reveal that these waveguides can be dispersion engineered to generate supercontinuum. The findings highlight the potential of SiN strip-loaded lithium niobate platform in sustaining broadband nonlinear light sources.



ID: 483
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Nanoimprinting for all-polymer electro-optic waveguide devices

Franciele Henrique1, Andreas Maeder1, Ülle-Linda Talts1, Giovanni Finco1, David Pohl1, Fabian Kaufmann1, Marc Reig Escalé1, Delwin Elder2,3, Larry Dalton2, Rachel Grange1

1Optical Nanomaterial Group, Institute for Quantum Electronics, Department of Physics, ETH Zurich, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland; 2Department of Chemistry, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-1700, USA; 3NLM Photonics, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA

We performed the design and fabrication of polymer waveguide circuits, aiming for applications as electro-optic devices. Uniform waveguides with over one centimeter of length were fabricated by soft nanoimprint lithography. These multimode waveguides present a height of 3 µm and low surface roughness (2 nm), with a thin residual layer of 600 nm. Propagation losses at 1550 nm are estimated to be around 7 dB/cm.



ID: 487
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Bloch Surface Waves in resonant structures

Zongyuan Tang1,2, Giorgio Zambito3, Maria Caterina Giordano3, Yanjun Liu2, Francesco Buatier de Mongeot3, Emiliano Descrovi1

1Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy; 2Southern University of Science and Technology, China; 3University of Genoa, Italy

In this work, we make a step forward in the manipulation of light on the surface of one-dimensional photonic crystal through Bloch Surface Waves (BSW) within resonant structures of various types. Linear Fabry-Perot cavities eventually combined with diffraction gratings allow to directly couple BSW from free-space radiation. Design, fabrication and experimental characterization are provided.



ID: 496
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Comb-based FTIR spectroscopy of CO perturbed by N2 at 4.6 µm

Akiko Nishiyama1,2, Grzegorz Kowzan1, Dominik Charczun1, Roman Ciuryło1, Piotr Maslowski1

1Institute of Physics, Faculty of Physics, Astronomy and Informatics, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Grudziądzka 5, 87-100 Toruń, Poland; 2National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ), National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, 1-1-1 Umezono, 305-8563, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan

Line-shape measurements of the fundamental vibrational band of CO at 4.6 µm perturbed by N2 with a mid-infrared frequency comb-based Fourier-transform spectrometer were performed. Precise collisional line-shape parameters for 41 lines were determined, including the pressure broadening and shifting and speed-dependence of the collisional width. The results were compared with sparse literature data available.



ID: 497
TOM 5 Optical Materials

CaWO4:Yb3+,Tm3+ Crystals and SrAl2O4:Eu2+,Dy3+ Phosphors in Glass-Based Composites for Green Afterglow after NIR Excitation

Evellyn Santos Magalhães1, Ahmed Sedda1,6, Bartosz Bondzior1,2, Sami Vuori3,4, David Van der Heggen5, Philippe Smet5, Mika Lastusaari3, Laeticia Petit1

1Tampere University, Finland; 2Institute of Low Temperature and Structure Research, Poland; 3University of Turku, Finland; 4University of Turku Graduate School, Finland; 5Ghent University, Belgium; 6LUT University, Finland

Here, we present the preparation of composites with green persistent luminescence using melting process. The composites are phosphate glass (75NaPO3-25CaF2 and 90NaPO3-10NaF (in mol%)) with embedded phosphors: CaWO4: Yb3+, Tm3+ crystals with blue upconversion and SrAl2O4:Eu2+,Dy3+ with green persistent luminescence. Green persistent luminescence above 0.3 mcd/m2 can be seen for ~ 30 minutes after charging with 980 nm due to energy transfer between the blue upconverter crystals and the persistent luminescent phosphors. Challenges related to the fabrication of such composites are discussed.



ID: 503
Focused Sessions 4: Machine-Learning for Optics and Photonic Computing for AI

Realization of tunable ultrabroadband interconnection for solitonic-plasmonic synapsis by exploiting epsilon near zero conducting oxides

Hamed Tari, Alessandro Bile, Arif Nabizada, Riccardo Pepino, Eugenio Fazio

Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

This research introduces a novel and highly efficient method to interconnect two metallic nanostrips that support the propagation of surface plasmon polariton (SPP) waves exploiting a photorefractive soliton guide. The intricate design of the multilayer geometry enables light control diffraction at the metallic nanostrip's end and reduces its angular dispersion. Moreover, the system's on/off state can be switched by exploiting the epsilon near zero properties of the indium tin oxide (ITO) layer. The photorefractive crystal positioned between the two plasmonic waveguides enables the self-confinement of light, generating a waveguide that can be utilized by both the writing light and other wavelengths transmitted as signals. The resulting SPP waves can be efficiently recoupled in the second nanostrip, with an efficiency of around 40% across a broad range of wavelengths. This cutting-edge approach paves the way for significant advancements in the field of nanophotonics and provides a fundamental framework for the development of new, highly efficient optical interconnects in nanoscale systems. The findings of this study have implications for a wide range of applications, including nanoscale sensing, optical computing, and data communication.



ID: 506
TOM 4 Nanophotonics

Electronic probing and manipulation of nanophotonic phenomena

Jaime Abad-Arredondo, Francisco-José García-Vidal, Antonio I. Fernández-Domínguez

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain

Electrons have been invaluable in the development of tools to study nanoscale phenomena. In this talk we explore novel avenues to explore light-matter coupling at the nanoscale by leveraging electrons, made accessible through recent technical advancements. On the one hand, advances in nanofabrication allow the manufacturing of electrically driven nanogap antennas. By placing an excitonic material on top of the gap, hybrid light-matter states are formed. We demonstrate how the electrically controlled tunneling-electron-current can be used as a source to drive the polaritonic modes. This has direct applications to the development of on-chip nanophotonic quantum devices. On the other hand, recent advances in controlling the quantum properties of collimated free-electron beams have positioned them as promising probes for investigating quantum matter at the nanoscale. We provide a model Hamiltonian that captures the interplay between electronic transitions and optical modes. Our Hamiltonian is constructed using macroscopic Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) principles and is parameterized using the electromagnetic Dyadic Green's function. We apply this model to study state preparation on an isolated quantum-emitter (QE), and to perform polariton sensing with modulated free electrons in a hybrid QE-optical cavity setup.



ID: 515
Special Session on “Opto-electronic Nanotechnologies and Microsystems” (ONM)

Thermo-optic phase shifter based on amorphous silicon carbide

Elisa Demetra Mallemace1,2, Yaoqin Lu2, Xiaodong Shi2, Didier Chaussende3, Vincent Tabouret3, Sandro Rao1, Haiyan Ou2, Francesco Giuseppe Della Corte4

1Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria, Italy; 2Technical University of Denmark, DTU Electro, 2800 Lyngby, Denmark; 3Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, SIMaP, 38000 Grenoble, France; 4University of Naples Federico II, DIETI Dept., 80125 Naples, Italy

We report the preliminary experimental results for an amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC) thermo-optic phase shifter (TOPS). This device is based on microring resonator (MRR) structure with a titanium (Ti) heater placed on the top of the device, separated by 1.5 μm thick SiO2 to reduce the optical loss. The proposed a-SiC microring has a thickness and a radius of 1.1 μm and 33 μm, respectively. By applying an electrical power in the Ti heater, a resonance wavelength shift at an optical wavelength of λ=1550 nm is shown, and the extracted thermal tunability is 52.2 pm/mW.



ID: 516
TOM 7 Optical frequency combs

Frequency-comb spectral broadening in 4H-silicon-carbide nanophotonic waveguides

Lucas Deniel1, Melissa A. Guidry2, Daniil M. Lukin2, Ki Youl Yang2, Joshua Yang2, Jelena Vučković2, Theodor W. Hänsch1, Nathalie Picqué1

1Max-Planck Institute of Quantum Optics, Germany; 2E. L. Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University

Silicon carbide (SiC) on insulator has emerged as a powerful platform for integrated nonlinear optics owing to its broad transparency window, its high refractive index and its large second- and third-order optical non-linearity and propagation loss as low as 0.1 dB/cm . Here we investigate the formation of visible and mid-IR dispersive waves in SiC waveguides. Owing to the strong optical nonlinearity of SiC, pulse energies as low as 200 pJ are sufficient to generate a broad spectrum centered in the 3-4 µm range, region of the fundamental CH, NH, OH stretches in molecules. Low seeding powers open up the prospect of fully on-chip devices including ultrashort-pulse seed source and broadening waveguides and even of integrated spectrometers for trace gas sensing.



ID: 535
Focused Sessions 4: Machine-Learning for Optics and Photonic Computing for AI

Machine learning enabled digital compensation of phase-to-amplitude distortion in fibre-optic...

Sonia Boscolo, Nguyen Long H., Stylianos Sygletos

Aston University, United Kingdom

We numerically demonstrate an advanced digital signal processing method for compensating the

phase-to-amplitude distortion conversion caused by the interaction of the phase noise induced by pump dithering with the dispersive fibre channel in fibr



ID: 545
TOM 9 Applications of Optics and Photonics

Ultra-fine grinding as a prerequisite for producing polishable free-form optics

Jens Bliedtner1, Oliver Fähnle2, Sebastian Henkel1, Christian Schulze1, Martin Gerhardt3

1Ernst-Abbe-Uiversity of Applied Sciences Jena, Germany; 2OST – Eastern Switzerland University of Applied Sciences; 3Günter Effgen Gmb

In many conventional optical manufacturing processes, lapping is still a standard method to provide

polishable surfaces. With the increasing use of CNC technology, efforts are being made to substitute the

lapping process in the process chain. The paper presents studies that compare the lapping and fine grinding

processes and provide an assessment of the subsequent polishing process. By using fine grinding with resin

bond tools, polishing times can be significantly reduced and subsurface damage structures minimized. Ultrafine grinding is also an important shaping process for the production of complex surface geometries, such as

free-form optics.



 
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