Abstract Radiofrequency (RF) injection locking and spectral broadening of a terahertz (THz) quantum‐cascade vertical‐external‐cavity surface‐emitting laser (QC‐VECSEL) is demonstrated. An intracryostat VECSEL focusing cavity design is used to enable continuous‐wave lasing with a cavity length over 30 mm, which corresponds to a round‐trip frequency near 5 GHz. Strong RF current modulation is injected to the QC‐metasurface electrical bias to pull and lock the round‐trip frequency. The injection locking range at various RF injection powers is recorded and compared with the injection locking theory. Moreover, the lasing spectrum broadens from 14 GHz in free‐running mode to a maximum spectral width around 110 GHz with 20 dBm of injected RF power. This experimental setup is suitable for further exploration of active mode‐locking and picosecond pulse generation in THz QC‐VECSELs.
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Multi-bounce self-mixing in terahertz metasurface external-cavity lasers
The effects of optical feedback on a terahertz (THz) quantum-cascade metasurface vertical-external-cavity surface-emitting laser (QC-VECSEL) are investigated via self-mixing. A single-mode 2.80 THz QC-VECSEL operating in continuous-wave is subjected to various optical feedback conditions (i.e., feedback strength, round-trip time, and angular misalignment) while variations in its terminal voltage associated with self-mixing are monitored. Due to its large radiating aperture and near-Gaussian beam shape, we find that the QC-VECSEL is strongly susceptible to optical feedback, which is robust against misalignment of external optics. This, in addition to the use of a high-reflectance flat output coupler, results in high feedback levels associated with multiple round-trips within the external cavity-a phenomenon not typically observed for ridge-waveguide QC-lasers. Thus, a new theoretical model is established to describe self-mixing in the QC-VECSEL. The stability of the device under variable optical feedback conditions is also studied. Any mechanical instabilities of the external cavity (such as vibrations of the output coupler), are enhanced due to feedback and result in low-frequency oscillations of the terminal voltage. The work reveals how the self-mixing response differs for the QC-VECSEL architecture, informs other systems in which optical feedback is unavoidable, and paves the way for QC-VECSEL self-mixing applications.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2041165
- PAR ID:
- 10505390
- Publisher / Repository:
- Optica
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Optics Express
- Volume:
- 32
- Issue:
- 11
- ISSN:
- 1094-4087
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 18880
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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