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High-pulse-energy integrated mode-locked laser using a Mamyshev oscillator

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Why This Matters

This breakthrough in integrated mode-locked lasers using Mamyshev oscillators signifies a major advancement in on-chip ultrafast laser technology, achieving high pulse energies suitable for nonlinear applications like supercontinuum generation. It paves the way for compact, high-performance laser sources that can be integrated into portable scientific and industrial tools, transforming fields such as spectroscopy and chemical analysis.

Key Takeaways

Ultrafast lasers have led to numerous advances across science and technology: they enabled corneal surgery1, revealed chemical reaction dynamics2 and triggered the development of optical atomic clocks3. Over the past decades, extensive efforts have aimed to realize mode-locked lasers based on photonic integrated circuits (PICs) that are compact, manufactured at wafer scale and are compatible with further on-chip functionalities4,5,6. Yet, existing demonstrations to date lack the pulse energy required to drive nonlinear processes, such as supercontinuum generation. Here we demonstrate a mode-locked laser that overcomes this challenge through the use of erbium-ion-implanted silicon nitride PICs7. The laser is based on the Mamyshev oscillator architecture8, in which alternating spectral filtering and self-phase modulation enable mode-locking and can support large nonlinear phase shifts9. It operates without external seeding, delivering a 176-MHz pulse train with nanojoule pulse energy, comparable with fibre lasers and exceeding previous PIC-based sources by two orders of magnitude. The output exhibits high coherence, can be linearly compressed to 147 fs and can directly drive a 1.5-octave-spanning supercontinuum in a Si 3 N 4 waveguide, without any further amplification. A compact terahertz time-domain spectrometer driven by this source achieved a bandwidth of 5 THz and a 90-dB dynamic range. We demonstrate its application in non-contact chemical analysis and inspection. Our results show the potential of an integrated ultrafast laser, with applications ranging from chip-scale frequency metrology to portable spectroscopy systems.