We report an environmentally insensitive, all-fiberized, polarization-maintained (PM), self-starting, mode-locked Tm fiber laser cavity enabled by a single-wall carbon nanotube (SWNT) saturable absorber. This produces dissipative solitons at 1876 nm, with a repetition rate of 19.2 MHz, and a maximum average power of 21.5 mW, corresponding to a pulse energy of 1.1 nJ. The output pulse has a duration of 4.2 ps and can be compressed to 391 fs using a grating-based compressor. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of an all-fiberized, all-PM, dissipative-soliton, mode-locked thulium fiber laser using a SWNT saturable absorber.
We report an all-fiberized, dissipative-soliton, mode-locked thulium fiber laser enabled by a single-wall carbon nanotube saturable absorber operating at 1790 nm for deep-penetration three-photon microscopy in bio-medical imaging applications. The laser provides output pulses with a maximum pulse energy of 1.3 nJ and a minimum pulse duration of 310 fs after compression. With a new pump recycling design, a low pump threshold of 110 mW is observed. Consequently, a compact mode-locked thulium fiber laser cavity using a single-mode pump laser diode is successfully realized.
We combine an all-fiber dual wavelength, self-synchronized laser and a dedicated multi-channel detection unit to perform state-of-the-art multiplex Stimulated Raman Scattering (SRS) microscopy. The system covers the full CH spectrum in 1 μs reaching shot-noise limited performances with 25 μW per detection channel. This all-inone solution is based on a passively synchronized dual-wavelength laser source with shot-noise limited relative intensity noise from 600 kHz and a modular multi-channel lock-in detection unit. The synergistic design between laser source and detection system simplifies multiplex SRS implementation for real-time full-chemical imaging.
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