
Nonlinear distortion of optical pulses by self-produced free carriers in short or highly lossy silicon-based waveguides
Author(s) -
Hagen Renner
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.20.025718
Subject(s) - optics , free carrier absorption , attenuation , materials science , pulse (music) , distortion (music) , absorption (acoustics) , self phase modulation , physics , silicon , ultrashort pulse , kerr effect , nonlinear optics , nonlinear system , optoelectronics , laser , detector , amplifier , cmos , quantum mechanics
An explicit analytical solution for the asymmetric attenuation of optical pulses by self-produced free carriers in silicon waveguides is derived. It allows us to quantify the pulse distortion and to calculate explicitly the free-carrier density and the nonlinear phase shifts caused by the Kerr effect and by free-carrier refraction. We show that omitting two-photon absorption (TPA) as a cause of attenuation and accounting only for free-carrier absorption (FCA) as done in the derivation appropriately models the pulse propagation in short or highly lossy silicon-based waveguides such as plasmonic waveguides with particular use for high-energy input pulses. Moreover, this formulation is also aimed at serving as a tool in discussing the role of FCA in its competition with TPA when used for continuum generation or pulse compression in low-loss silicon waveguides. We show that sech-shaped intensity pulses maintain their shape independently of the intensity or pulse width and self-induced FCA may act as an ideal limiter on them. Pulse propagation under self-induced free-carrier absorption exhibits some features of superluminal propagation such as fast or even backward travelling. We find that input pulses need to have a sufficiently steep front slope to be compressible at all and illustrate this with the FCA-induced pulse broadening for Lorentzian-shaped input pulses.