The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Nonlinearity of liquefying gallium: a breakthrough opportunity for controlling light with light at milliwatt power levels

Nonlinearity of liquefying gallium: a breakthrough opportunity for controlling light with light at milliwatt power levels
Nonlinearity of liquefying gallium: a breakthrough opportunity for controlling light with light at milliwatt power levels
We have found that an interface between glass and metallic gallium held just below the melting point shows an astonishingly large broadband cubic nonlinearity reaching χ(3) ~ 1 esu. This constitutes a new type of nonlinear optical response. This large nonlinearity is available in a very versatile material geometry. It works at room temperature and has major device potential in optoelectronics. The physical mechanism behind the nonlinearity is related to a new type of optically induced phase transition between two phases of gallium and shows critical behavior of the material susceptibilities and relaxation times appropriate to a second-order phase transition. The nonlinearity is much faster than In liquid crystals and has the advantage of being very broadband in comparison with the near band-gap and exitonic nonlinearities in semiconductors. It spans from visible to near infrared covering important telecom spectral windows. The nonlinearity is fully reversible and the effect is stable as long as the sample temperature is maintained to within 1°C just below the melting point of gallium which is about 29%. We have demonstrated that the nonlinearity is fully compatible with waveguide technology as the gallium mirror may be formed at the tip of a single mode flber. A high-contrast optical switch has already been demonstrated operating at milliwatt light power levels, with a roll-off frequency in excess of 100kHz The switch is also capable of routing sub-microsecond optical pulses. In another application, a liquefying gallium mirror was used to achieve Q-switching of an erbium fiber laser.
Dhanjal, S.
a3f4fa8d-654f-4162-bd38-67c9b2d2f136
Emel'yanov, V.I.
c48928d6-e942-4ab6-a8f4-4f118073b953
Petropoulos, P.
522b02cc-9f3f-468e-bca5-e9f58cc9cad7
Richardson, D.J.
ebfe1ff9-d0c2-4e52-b7ae-c1b13bccdef3
Zheludev, N.I.
32fb6af7-97e4-4d11-bca6-805745e40cc6
Dhanjal, S.
a3f4fa8d-654f-4162-bd38-67c9b2d2f136
Emel'yanov, V.I.
c48928d6-e942-4ab6-a8f4-4f118073b953
Petropoulos, P.
522b02cc-9f3f-468e-bca5-e9f58cc9cad7
Richardson, D.J.
ebfe1ff9-d0c2-4e52-b7ae-c1b13bccdef3
Zheludev, N.I.
32fb6af7-97e4-4d11-bca6-805745e40cc6

Dhanjal, S., Emel'yanov, V.I., Petropoulos, P., Richardson, D.J. and Zheludev, N.I. (1998) Nonlinearity of liquefying gallium: a breakthrough opportunity for controlling light with light at milliwatt power levels. XVI International Conference on Coherent and Nonlinear Optics (ICONO '98), , Moscow, Russian Federation. 29 Jun - 03 Jul 1998. 1 pp .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

We have found that an interface between glass and metallic gallium held just below the melting point shows an astonishingly large broadband cubic nonlinearity reaching χ(3) ~ 1 esu. This constitutes a new type of nonlinear optical response. This large nonlinearity is available in a very versatile material geometry. It works at room temperature and has major device potential in optoelectronics. The physical mechanism behind the nonlinearity is related to a new type of optically induced phase transition between two phases of gallium and shows critical behavior of the material susceptibilities and relaxation times appropriate to a second-order phase transition. The nonlinearity is much faster than In liquid crystals and has the advantage of being very broadband in comparison with the near band-gap and exitonic nonlinearities in semiconductors. It spans from visible to near infrared covering important telecom spectral windows. The nonlinearity is fully reversible and the effect is stable as long as the sample temperature is maintained to within 1°C just below the melting point of gallium which is about 29%. We have demonstrated that the nonlinearity is fully compatible with waveguide technology as the gallium mirror may be formed at the tip of a single mode flber. A high-contrast optical switch has already been demonstrated operating at milliwatt light power levels, with a roll-off frequency in excess of 100kHz The switch is also capable of routing sub-microsecond optical pulses. In another application, a liquefying gallium mirror was used to achieve Q-switching of an erbium fiber laser.

Text
1691 - Other
Download (92kB)

More information

Published date: June 1998
Venue - Dates: XVI International Conference on Coherent and Nonlinear Optics (ICONO '98), , Moscow, Russian Federation, 1998-06-29 - 1998-07-03

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 76625
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/76625
PURE UUID: 92d7675a-ef0c-4851-acf3-2db7b7581853
ORCID for P. Petropoulos: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1576-8034
ORCID for D.J. Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7751-1058
ORCID for N.I. Zheludev: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1013-6636

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:41

Export record

Contributors

Author: S. Dhanjal
Author: V.I. Emel'yanov
Author: P. Petropoulos ORCID iD
Author: D.J. Richardson ORCID iD
Author: N.I. Zheludev ORCID iD

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×