INTERFEROMETRIC MEASUREMENT OF LOW-FREQUENCY PHASE NOISE OF AN EXTERNAL CAVITY SEMICONDUCTOR LASER

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NUWC-NPT Technical Memorandum 951024 Naval Undersea Warfare Center Division Newport, Rhode Island INTERFEROMETRIC MEASUREMENT OF LOW-FREQUENCY PHASE NOISE OF AN EXTERNAL CAVITY SEMICONDUCTOR LASER Antonio L. Deus Submarine Sonar Department 25 May 1995 Approved for public release; distribution unlimited

Report Documentation Page Form Approved OMB No. 0704-0188 Public reporting burden for the collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to Washington Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports, 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 1204, Arlington VA 22202-4302. Respondents should be aware that notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person shall be subject to a penalty for failing to comply with a collection of information if it does not display a currently valid OMB control number. 1. REPORT DATE 25 MAY 1995 2. REPORT TYPE Technical Memo 3. DATES COVERED 25-05-1995 to 25-05-1995 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Interferometric Measurement of Low-Frequency Phase Noise of an External Cavity Semiconductor Laser 6. AUTHOR(S) Antonio Deus 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 0602314N 5d. PROJECT NUMBER RJ14A13 5e. TASK NUMBER 1 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) Naval Undersea Warfare Center Division,Newport,RI,02841 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) Office of Naval Research 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER TM 951024 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR S ACRONYM(S) ONR 11. SPONSOR/MONITOR S REPORT NUMBER(S) 12. DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES NUWC2015 14. ABSTRACT The external cavity laser is a good candidate for use in the development of interferometric fiber sensors with small path length differences. This report summarizes an interferometric measurement of phase noise characteristics of a Hewlett-Packard external cavity laser operating in the 1550 nm wavelength band. The measurement was made using an unbalanced Mach-Zehnder fiber interferometer. This result is more than an order of magnitude lower than typically observed with semiconductor diode lasers, but nearly two orders of magnitude greater than that observed for a diode laser-pumped solid-state Nd: YAG laser. 15. SUBJECT TERMS external cavity laser 16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF: 17. LIMITATION OF ABSTRACT a. REPORT unclassified b. ABSTRACT unclassified c. THIS PAGE unclassified Same as Report (SAR) 18. NUMBER OF PAGES 14 19a. NAME OF RESPONSIBLE PERSON Standard Form 298 (Rev. 8-98) Prescribed by ANSI Std Z39-18

ABSTRACT The external cavity laser is a good candidate for use in the development of interferometric fiber sensors with small path length differences. This report summarizes an interferometric measurement of phase noise characteristics of a Hewlett-Packard external cavity laser operating in the 1550 nm wavelength band. The measurement was made using an unbalanced Mach-Zehnder fiber interferometer. This result is more than an order of magnitude lower than typically observed with semiconductor diode lasers, but nearly two orders of magnitude greater than that observed for a diode laser-pumped solid-state Nd: Y AG laser. ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION The experiment described in this memorandum was performed under Task 1 of the Advanced Acoustic Array Project as part of the Submarine/Surface Ship USW Surveillance Technology Program sponsored by the Office of Naval Research (ONR): Program Element 0602314N; ONR Technology Program UN3B; Project Number R114Al3; NUWC Job Order No. A60002; NUWC Principal Investigator, Barry Blakely (Code 2141); Program Director, G.C. Connolly (Code 2192). The ONR Associate Director for Warfare Applications, OAS Sensing and Systems Division is T.G. Goldsberry (ONR 321 W). The ONR Program Manager for Sensors and Sources is K. Dial (ONR 321SS). The author of this report is located at the Naval Undersea Warfare Center Detachment, New London, CT 06320. The technical reviewer for this memorandum was Barry Blakely (Code 2141).

TABLE OF CONTENTS Section Page LIST OF ll..lustra TIONS... 11 1 IN1RODUCfiON... 1 2 MEASUREMENT DESCRIPTION... 2 3 TEST RESULTS... 3 4 SUMMARY... 8 REFERENCES...... 9

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Figure Page 1 Schematic of External Cavity Laser........................................................ 2 2 Schematic ofexperimental Arrangement to Measure Laser Phase Noise... 3 3 Laser Phase Noise With an Optical Path Difference of 80 m for an HP External Cavity Laser... 4 4 Time Series of Demodulator Output... 4 5 Comparison of Laser Phase Noise With an Optical Path Difference of 80 m for an HP External Cavity Laser With Fan "On" and Fan "Off'... 5 6 Sketch of Lissajous Patterns. (a) Ideal Pattern (b) During Phase Noise Measurement With Fan "On" (c) During Phase Noise Measurement With Fan "Off'... 6 7 Laser Phase Noise Scaled for an Optical Path Difference of 2 em for an HP External Cavity Laser With Fan "On".......................................................... 7 11

INTERFEROMETRIC MEASUREMENT OF LOW-FREQUENCY PHASE NOISE OF AN EXTERNAL CAVITY SEMICONDUCTOR LASER INTRODUCTION Interferometric fiber optic sensor systems typically use highly coherent, narrow linewidth, single frequency light sources. Although a low phase noise Nd:YAG laser has been identifiedl, the Nd:YAG laser operates at 1319 nanometers (nm) and has a fixed wavelength output. For some systems it may be desirable to have a laser that is tunable in wavelength. Also, operating in the 1550 nm telecommunications band is advantageous due to the availability of direct optical amplification with erbium doped fiber amplifiers. One such source is an external cavity laser, which can have a laser linewidth of approximately 100kHz. This laser exhibits a long coherence length and thus low phase noise and is suitable for demonstrating the sensitivity of fiber interferometers to pressure. Because of path length mismatches between the two interferometer paths, instability of the laser results in interferometric phase noise. The magnitude of the phase noise,!l.l/jn, is dependent upon the path length mismatch U and can be expressed as!l.l/jn = 2nnU!l.v, c (1) where!l. v is the rms laser frequency instability, n is the fiber index of refraction, and c is the speed of light. The laser frequency instability is caused by two mechanisms. A spontaneously emitted photon will change the optical phase within the device by a random amount that leads to a frequency shift. Second, the emission of a photon will cause changes in the gain of the laser, or equivalently, the carrier population. Changes in carrier population lead to a f~equency fluctuation due to the change in refractive index of the laser2,3.

This report summarizes an interferometric measurement of phase noise characteristics of a Hewlett-Packard external cavity laser, model number 8168A, operating in the 1550 nm wavelength band. Figure 1 shows a schematic of the internal configuration of the laser. It consists of a diode laser with one facet that is a high reflector and the other facet coated with an anti-reflection (AR) coating for low reflectivity. The output from the AR coated facet is diffracted back on itself by a diffraction grating, which narrows the cavity optical pass band. An etalon is used to further narrow the cavity optical pass band. Tuning is achieved by controlling the angle of incidence of both the grating and the etalon. The diode laser, which typically has a cavity extending from the front facet to the rear facet of the diode, now has an "external cavity" extending beyond the rear facet of the diode to the diffraction grating. Such techniques can narrow the typical diode spectrum of 6X1Q20 Hz (5 nm) to a single line that is less than 100kHz (8X1Q-16 nm). The result is a highly coherent, narrow linewidth tunable laser. The HP external cavity specified 100kHz laser linewidth corresponds to a coherence length of 3000 meters. The wavelength tuning range is from 1500 nm to 1565 nm. ANTI-REFLECTION COATING HIGH REFLECTION COATING GRATING ETALON LENS DIODE LASER LENS BEAM Figure 1. Schematic of External Cavity Laser MEASUREMENT DESCRIPTION The experimental arrangement to measure the low-frequency phase noise of the laser is shown in figure 2. To provide an interferometric system with a very high resolution fqr 2

ANTIREFLECTION TERMINATION EXTERNAL CAVITY LASER MACH-ZEHNDER FIBER INTERFEROMETER I LOW PASS FILTER CIRCUIT I I DETECTOR CIRCUIT \ DEMODULATOR CIRCUIT Figure 2. Schematic of Experimental Arrangement to Measure Laser Phase Noise optical frequencies, an all-fiber Mach-Zehnder interferometer configuration with an 80-m fiber imbalance between its two paths was used. The interferometer was encapsulated in a housing specially designed to shield it from environmental noise sources, such as acoustic noise. A small piezoelectric fiber stretcher was incorporated into one arm of the interferometer to generate an optical phase carrier. This is necessary to use the phase generated carrier demodulation technique to measure the phase noise4. TEST RESULTS Figure 3 shows the results of these measurements over a range of 10 Hz to 2.5 khz. The measured phase noise at a frequency of 1 khz was 2 mrad/..fiii., corresponding to a laser frequency jitter of 800 Hz/..fiii.. This result is more than an order of magnitude lower than that typically observed with semiconductor diode lasers, but nearly two orders of magnitude greater than that observed for a diode laser-pumped solid-state Nd:YAG laser1. Figure 4 is a plot of the time series for the laser phase noise. Of particular importance is the low frequency modulation at approximately 34Hz and the 15 Volt peak-to-peak voltage. This high level voltage is nearly at the 28 Volt limit of the electronics. 3

... N :I: ';> 1E+O :tl ('II 1 E-1...... "'!II '5 z 1 E-2 "'!II ('II.c 0.. 1 E-3 10 100 1000 10000 Frequency (Hz) Figure 3. Laser Pbase Noise Witll an Optical Path Difference of 80 m for an HP External Cavity Laser... ~ 0... > "C "' :I... 0.. E < 5 0-5 0 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 Time (seconds) Figure 4. Time Series of Demodulator Output 4

Laser resonant cavities are particularly sensitive to thermal, acoustic, and mechanical vibrational perturbations due to their high Q. This is especially important where the laser resonant cavity is long relative to the wavelength of the perturbation, such as the case with an external cavity configuration. Typical diode laser cavities are approximately 300 J..Lm in length versus centimeters for external cavity lasers. These concerns warrant a description of the sensitivity of the laser to mechanical and acoustic vibration. The laser cavity is packaged in an enclosure together with all supporting electronics and a small fan to circulate air in the enclosure. A measurement of the laser phase noise with the internal fan "off', can give some insight into the vibrational sensitivity of the laser. Figure 5 shows a measurement of phase noise for the case with the fan turned "off", compared to that of the fan turned "on". Below 700Hz there is an order of magnitude reduction in laser phase noise. As shown in figure 5, the dependence of phase noise of the external cavity laser with the fan "off' is falling off at a slope of 1/f above 250 Hz. A 1/f dependence was also measured for.an Nd: YAG laserl. The time series of the demodulator output for the case of the fan "off" is very similar to that of figure 4, with the exception that the amplitude was reduced to 8.5 Volts peak-to-peak. Typically a Lissajous pattern, generated by sine and cosine signal components from the demodulator, is monitored to qualitatively assess the performance of the system. Ideally, the Lissajous pattern consists of a point that lies on the perimeter of a perfect circle. Any optical phase change is perceived as a finite length arc (representing the amplitude of the signal), which oscillates between the endpoints of the arc at the signal frequency. Any deviation from a perfect circle indicates changes in the interferometric signal optical power level (typically due to polarization changes) at a rate that exceeds the update rate of the automatic gain control of the demodulator. Figure 6 sho~s sketches of the Lissajous figures for this experiment. 5

le+o... N -- -Internal fan "on" :I: "";>... 'C - Internal fan "off" 1 E-1.::. -----------~......... _ --'... ~ IU (/1 '(5 z 1 E-2.. IU (/1 f. 1 E-3 10 100 1000 10000 Frequency (Hz) Figure 5. Comparison of Laser Phase Noise With an Optical Path Difference of 80 m for an HP External Cavity Laser With Fan "On" and Fan "Off'... 1 I ---r..,.1'11111-----?.0v (a) I........'.. \. /...'..../....... ~ ----~ ~11 I ---r... 7.0 v ----- ~1~1~... ----- 7.0 v ----- ~1 (b) (c) Figure 6. Sketch of Lissajous Patterns. (a) Ideal Pattern (b) During Phase Noise Measurement With Fan "On" (c) During Phase Noise Measurement With Fan "Off' In interferometric sensor systems, near path balanced interferometers are typically used to reduce the effects of laser phase noise. Low phase noise characteristics of the laser alleviate path matching 6

tolerances while providing low radian level phase detection sensitivities. For practical implementation in interferometric systems using time division multiplexing (TDM), sensors are typically matched to 2 em. Additional mismatch can occur because the interferometer reference path can be shipboard while the sensing path is exposed to hydrostatic pressure. For an example of 2500 psi hydrostatic pressure, the additional mismatch would be approximately 20 nm, which is insignificant.... N J: ~... 'C ftl...... 1 E-4 1 E-5 Cll Cll a z 1E-6 Cll Cll ftl.c Cl. 1 E-7 10 100 1000 10000 Frequency (Hz) Figure 7. Laser Phase Noise Scaled for an Optical Path Difference of 2 em for an HP External Cavity Laser With Fan "On" In figure 7 the results from figure 3 are scaled for an optical path difference of 2 em. The phase noise at a frequency of 1 khz is 0. 56 J1rad/..fiii., corresponding to a laser frequency jitter of 0. 22 Hz/ -fiii.. This noise level in itself is excellent for use in interferometric systems, however, larger path imbalances can produce noise terms that significantly add to system noise. 7

SUMMARY The phase noise characteristics of an external cavity semiconductor laser have been measured using an unbalanced Mach-Zehnder fiber interferometer. This result is more than an order of magnitude lower than typically observed with semiconductor diode lasers, but nearly two orders of magnitude greater than that observed for a diode laser-pumped solid-state Nd: Y AG laser. The vibration sensitivity of the laser was qualitatively assessed. The external cavity laser is a good candidate for use in the development of interferometric fiber sensors with small path length differences (of the order of centimeters). It is recommended that further t~sting of this laser (and of other lasers for similar applications) include phase noise measurements while subjecting it to known vibration and acoustic levels. 8

REFERENCES 1. K. Williams, et al., "Interferometric Measurement of Low-Frequency Phase Noise Characteristics of Diode Laser-Pumped Nd:YAG Ring Laser," Electronics Letters, vol. 25, no. 12, 1989, p. 774. 2. P. Milonni and J. Eberly, LASERS, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1988, pp. 224-227, 342-347. 3. A. Yariv, Optical Electronics, CBS College Publishing, New York, 1985, pp. 327-335. 4. A. Dandridge, A. Tveten, and T. Giallorenzi, "Homodyne Demodulation Scheme for Fiber Optic Sensors Using Phase Generated Carrier," IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, vol. QE-19, no. 10, 1982, p. 1647. 9