Presentation + Paper
20 February 2017 Development of an integrated sub-picometric SWIFTS-based wavelength meter
Céline Duchemin, Fabrice Thomas, Bruno Martin, Eric Morino, Renaud Puget, Robin Oliveres, Christophe Bonneville, Thierry Gonthiez, Nicolas Valognes
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 10110, Photonic Instrumentation Engineering IV; 1011016 (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2249860
Event: SPIE OPTO, 2017, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
SWIFTSTM technology has been known for over five years to offer compact and high-resolution laser spectrum analyzers. The increase of wavelength monitoring demand with even better accuracy and resolution has pushed the development of a wavelength meter based on SWIFTSTM technology, named LW-10.

As a reminder, SWIFTSTM principle consists in a waveguide in which a stationary wave is created, sampled and read out by a linear image sensor array. Due to its inherent properties (non-uniform subsampling) and aliasing signal (as presented in Shannon-Nyquist criterion), the system offers short spectral window bandwidths thus needs an a priori on the working wavelength and thermal monitoring.

Although SWIFTSTM-based devices are barely sensitive to atmospheric pressure, temperature control is a key factor to master both high accuracy and wavelength meter resolution. Temperature control went from passive (temperature probing only) to active control (Peltier thermoelectric cooler) with milli-degree accuracy. The software part consists in dropping the Fourier-like transform, for a least-squares method directly on the interference pattern. Moreover, the consideration of the system’s chromatic behavior provides a "signature" for automated wavelength detection and discrimination.

This SWIFTSTM-based new device - LW-10 - shows outstanding results in terms of absolute accuracy, wavelength meter resolution as well as calibration robustness within a compact device, compared to other existing technologies. On the 630 – 1100 nm range, the final device configuration allows pulsed or CW lasers monitoring with 20 MHz resolution and 200 MHz absolute accuracy. Non-exhaustive applications include tunable laser control and frequency locking experiments
Conference Presentation
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Céline Duchemin, Fabrice Thomas, Bruno Martin, Eric Morino, Renaud Puget, Robin Oliveres, Christophe Bonneville, Thierry Gonthiez, and Nicolas Valognes "Development of an integrated sub-picometric SWIFTS-based wavelength meter", Proc. SPIE 10110, Photonic Instrumentation Engineering IV, 1011016 (20 February 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2249860
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CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Calibration

Waveguides

Sapphire lasers

Laser applications

Temperature metrology

Tunable lasers

Spectrum analysis

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