Raman amplifiers (original) (raw)

Definition: optical amplifiers based on Raman gain

Categories: article belongs to category fiber optics and waveguides fiber optics and waveguides, article belongs to category nonlinear optics nonlinear optics, article belongs to category optical amplifiers optical amplifiers, article belongs to category lightwave communications lightwave communications

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Contents

What are Raman Amplifiers?

A Raman amplifier is an optical amplifier based on Raman gain, which results from the effect of stimulated Raman scattering in some Raman gain medium. That medium is often an optical fiber (possibly a highly nonlinear fiber), although it can also be a bulk crystal, a waveguide in a photonic integrated circuit, or a cell with a gas or liquid medium. An input signal can be amplified while co- or counterpropagating with a pump beam, the wavelength of which is typically a few tens of nanometers shorter. For silica fibers, maximum gain is obtained for a frequency offset of ≈ 10–15 THz between pump and signal, depending on the composition of the fiber core.

Typical Features of Raman Amplifiers

For application in telecom systems, fiber Raman amplifiers compete with erbium-doped fiber amplifiers. Compared with those, their typical features are:

A telecom Raman amplifier is pumped with continuous-wave light from a diode laser. Efficient amplification of ultrashort pulses is also possible using copropagating pump pulses. However, the phenomenon of group velocity mismatch then severely limits the useful interaction length, particularly for pulse durations below 1 ps.

Fibers used for Raman amplifiers are not doped with rare earth ions. In principle, any ordinary single-mode fiber could be used, and in practice the transmission fibers themselves are often suitable (→ distributed amplifiers). However, there are special fibers with increased Raman gain, resulting from certain dopants (e.g. germania) for enhanced Raman cross-sections, or simply from a small effective mode area. Such highly nonlinear fibers are used for lumped Raman amplifiers, where a shorter piece of fiber is dedicated to amplification only. Also, there are phosphorous-doped fibers, for example, offering a much increased Raman shift (in terms of optical frequency), or alternatively a gain peak with very low Raman shift.

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Our new highly reliable Raman fiber amplifiers are based on patented new technology. With their high power up to 30 W the amplifiers cover the wavelength range from 1120 to 1370 nm that is not accessible by Yb or Er fiber amplifiers. With a tuning range of 10 nm and a relative intensity noise <1% r.m.s., TOPTICA offers its own portfolio of RFAs that can be seamlessly integrated with TOPTICA lasers as seeders and frequency converters to reach visible and UV wavelengths.

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MPBC’s Network-ready subsystems feature a variety of distributed Raman and patented super Raman amplifiers, delivering the highest level of sensitivity improvement in the industry for OPGW, terrestrial, and submarine networks.

Custom Raman fiber amplifiers (RFA) are also available for sodium Laser Guide Stars (LGS).

MPBC’s Single-frequency Raman fiber amplifiers are designed to provide optical gain in spectral bands not covered by rare-earth amplifiers for amplification of narrowband single-frequency sources.

Bibliography

[1] R. H. Stolen and E. P. Ippen, “Raman gain in glass optical waveguides”, Appl. Phys. Lett. 22, 276 (1973); doi:10.1063/1.1654637
[2] A. J. Stentz, “Applications of Raman lasers and amplifiers in fiber communication systems”, Proc. SPIE 3263, 91 (1998); doi:10.1117/12.308357
[3] Y. Emori et al., “100 nm bandwidth flat-gain Raman amplifiers pumped and gain-equalized by 12-wavelength-channel WDM laser diode unit”, Electron. Lett. 35, 1355 (1999); doi:10.1109/OFC.1999.766052
[4] S. A. E. Lewis et al., “Gain and saturation characteristics of dual-wavelength-pumped silica-fiber Raman amplifiers”, Electron. Lett. 35, 1178 (1999); doi:10.1049/el:19990824
[5] D. Bayart et al., “Broadband optical fiber amplification over 17.7 THz range”, Electron. Lett. 36, 1569 (2000); doi:10.1049/el:20001078
[6] V. E. Perlin and H. G. Winful, “Optimal design of flat-gain wide-band fiber Raman amplifiers”, J. Lightwave Technol. 20 (2), 250 (2002); doi:10.1109/50.983239
[7] V. E. Perlin and H. G. Winful, “On distributed Raman amplification for ultrabroad-band long-haul WDM systems”, J. Lightwave Technol. 20 (3), 409 (2002); doi:10.1109/50.988989
[8] M. N. Islam, “Raman amplifiers for telecommunications”, J. Sel. Top. Quantum Electron. 8 (3), 548 (2002); doi:10.1109/JSTQE.2002.1016358
[9] O. Boyraz and B. Jalali, “Demonstration of 11 dB fiber-to-fiber gain in a silicon Raman amplifier”, IEICE Elect. Expr. 1, 429 (2004); doi:10.1587/elex.1.429
[10] B. Jalali et al., “Raman-based silicon photonics”, J. Sel. Top. Quantum Electron. 12 (3), 412 (2006); doi:10.1109/JSTQE.2006.872708
[11] Y. Feng et al., “Multiwatts narrow linewidth fiber Raman amplifiers”, Opt. Express 16 (15), 10927 (2008); doi:10.1364/OE.16.010927
[12] J. Ji et al., “Analysis of the conversion to the first Stokes in cladding-pumped fiber Raman amplifiers”, IEEE Sel. Top. Quantum Electron. 15 (1), 129 (2009); doi:10.1109/JSTQE.2008.2010229
[13] A. K. Sridharan et al., “Brightness enhancement in a high-peak-power cladding-pumped Raman fiber amplifier”, Opt. Lett. 34 (14), 2234 (2009); doi:10.1364/OL.34.002234
[14] L. Dong, “Transverse mode instability in Raman fiber amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 59 (3), 6800108 doi:10.1109/JQE.2023.3253183
[15] Y. Peng et al., “Kilowatt-level narrow-linewidth cascaded Yb-Raman fiber amplifier at 1178 nm”, Opt. Lett. 50 (15), 4610 (2025); doi:10.1364/OL.562990
[16] J. Ma et al., “980-nm highly GeO2-doped fiber Raman laser directly pumped by a 940-nm multimode laser diode”, Opt. Lett. 50 (15), 4818 (2025); doi:10.1364/OL.566331
[17] G. P. Agrawal, Nonlinear Fiber Optics, 4th edn., Academic Press, New York (2007)
[18] ITU standard G.665 (01/05), “Generic characteristics of Raman amplifiers and Raman amplified subsystems”, International Telecommunication Union (2005)

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