Segment-chirped periodically poled lithium niobate waveguides for broadband supercontinuum generation
Abstract
Supercontinuum generation is a key technology in nonlinear optics, supporting a wide range of applications in frequency metrology and spectroscopy. Integrated photonics offers a promising route toward compact and efficient supercontinuum sources, yet extending the bandwidth while maintaining high spectral flatness remains a central challenge. Here we demonstrate an integrated broadband supercontinuum source based on segment-chirped periodically poled lithium niobate (SC-PPLN) nanophotonic waveguides. By discretizing the chirped poling profile into independently optimized segments, this approach enables high-fidelity ferroelectric domain inversion with near-ideal duty cycles and establishes broadband quasi-phase matching, overcoming the domain inhomogeneity and efficiency limitations commonly encountered in conventional chirped poling. The engineered phase-matching landscape supports efficient wavelength conversion and simultaneous activation of multiple second- and third-order nonlinear processes. Experimentally, we achieve a spectrally flat supercontinuum spanning three optical octaves, from 320 nm in the ultraviolet to 2600 nm in the mid-infrared. These results establish segment-chirped poling as a practical strategy for broadband wavelength conversion and supercontinuum generation in integrated photonics.
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