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All-Optical Processing of Optical-Network Signals using Distributed Feedback Amplifiers by Drew N PDF

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All-Optical Processing of Optical-Network Signals using Distributed Feedback Amplifiers by Drew N. Maywar SubmittedinPartialFulfillment ofthe Requirements fortheDegree DoctorofPhilosophy Supervisedby ProfessorGovindP. Agrawal The InstituteofOptics The College SchoolofEngineeringandAppliedSciences UniversityofRochester Rochester, New York 2000 ii To Rie iii Curriculum Vitae The authorwasborninPortHuron,Michigan,onMarch 1st, 1970. He beganhis undergraduatestudies in 1988 at the Universityof Rochester. During the summer of 1990,hestudiedtheJapaneselanguageattheEastAsianSummerLanguageInstitute at IndianaUniversity. He then received a Take-Five Scholarshipfromthe University ofRochestertostudytheJapaneselanguageandcultureatNanzanUniversity,Japan, for the 1991–1992 academic year. He received the B.S. degree in optics with high distinction and the B.A. degree in religion with honors and highest distinction in 1993. The author received a FulbrightFellowship in 1993 for a year of study at Osaka University,Japan. HisscientificresearchatInstituteofLaserEngineeringwasonthe temperaturedependenceofgaininNd:glasslaseramplifiers,andhislanguagestudies focusedon technicalJapanese, kanji,and theOsaka dialect. Theauthorbeganhisgraduatestudiesin1994attheInstituteofOptics,University ofRochester. Duringthe summer of1995 and the followingacademic year, he stud- ied the fabrication of complex-coupled distributed feedback lasers in the laboratory of Professor Thomas G. Brown. In the summer of 1996, he began his doctoral re- CURRICULUM VITAE iv search on distributed feedback semiconductor optical amplifiers under the direction of Professor Govind P. Agrawal. The author received the M.S. degree in optics in 1997, with a concentration in laser engineering. For one year beginning in October 1998, he performed a portion of his doctoral research under the guidance of Pro- fessor Yoshiaki Nakano at the University of Tokyo, as a recipient of a Dissertation Enhancement AwardfromtheU.S. NationalScience Foundation. Publications G. P. Agrawal and D. N. Maywar, “Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers with (cid:15) Bragg Gratings,” (chapter 10) in Nonlinear Photonic Crystals,” B. Eggleton andD. Slusher, Eds., Springer-Verlag,inpreparation. D. N. Maywar,G. P. Agrawal,andY. Nakano,“All-OpticalHysteresis Control (cid:15) via Cross-Phase Modulation in SemiconductorOptical Amplifiers,”submitted toJ. Opt. Soc. Am. B (2000). D.N.Maywar,Y.Nakano,andG.P.Agrawal,“1.3-to-1.5 mWavelengthCon- (cid:15) versionbyOpticallyPumpingaDistributedFeedbackAm(cid:22)plifier,IEEEPhoton- ics Tech. Lett. 12,858–860(2000). D. N. Maywar, G. P. Agrawal, and Y. Nakano, “Robust Optical Control of an (cid:15) Optical-Amplifier-BasedFlip–Flop,”OpticsExpress 6,75–80(2000). D. N. Maywar and G. P. Agrawal, “Low-Power All-Optical Switching in Ac- (cid:15) tive Semiconductor Chirped Periodic Structures,” Optics Express 3, 440–446 (1998). D. N. Maywar and G. P. Agrawal, “Effect of Chirped Gratings on Reflective (cid:15) OpticalBistabilityinDFBSemiconductorLaserAmplifiers,”IEEEJ.Quantum Electron., 34,2364–2370(1998). D. N. Maywarand G. P. Agrawal, “Transfer-MatrixAnalysis ofOpticalBista- (cid:15) bility in DFB Semiconductor Laser Amplifiers with Nonuniform Gratings,” IEEE J. QuantumElectron., 33,2029–2037(1997). CURRICULUM VITAE v Presentations D. N. Maywar, G. P. Agrawal, and Y. Nakano, “Control of Nonlinear Index (cid:15) Change in Semiconductor Laser Amplifiers for Signal Processing,” OSA An- nualMeeting, Rhode Island,October2000. D. N. Maywar, Govind P. Agrawal, Y. Nakano, “Robust All-Optical Control (cid:15) ofaSemiconductorOpticalAmplifierFlip–Flop,”OpticalAmplifiersandtheir Applications,Quebec, CA, July2000. D.N. Maywar,GovindP.Agrawal,Y.Nakano, “SemiconductorOpticalMem- (cid:15) ory Based on a DFB Amplifier,” IEICE Conference, Osaka, Japan, November 1999. D. N. Maywar,G. P. Agrawal,andY. Nakano, “WavelengthConversion Using (cid:15) anOptical Gain-Pump,”IEICEConference, Chitose, Japan, August 1999. D. N. Maywar, Y. Nakano, and G. P. Agrawal, “All-OpticalSet and Reset of a (cid:15) Semiconductor-Optical-Amplifier-BasedFlip–Flop,”Post-DeadlinePaper,Op- ticalAmplifiersandtheirApplications,Nara, Japan, June 1999. D. N. Maywar, G. P. Agrawal, and Y. Nakano, “Optical Switching and Mem- (cid:15) ory in Chirped-Grating DFB Amplifiers,” IEICE Conference, Osaka, Japan, January1999. D. N. Maywar and G. P. Agrawal, “High-Contrast All-Optical Switching in (cid:15) Chirped-GratingDFBAmplifiers,”OSAAnnualMeeting,Baltimore,MD,Oc- tober1998. G. P. Agrawal and D. N. Maywar, “All-Optical Switching with Chirped (cid:15) Gratings in Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers,” Invited Talk, Workshop on Novel Solitons and Nonlinear PeriodicStructures, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, March 1998. D. N. Maywar and G. P. Agrawal, “Low-Threshold Optical Switching in /4- (cid:15) shifted DFB Amplifiers with Chirped Gratings,” OSA Annual Meeting, L(cid:21)ong Beach, California,October1997. Patents D.N.Maywar,Y.Nakano,andG.P. Agrawal,“All-OpticalFlip–FlopDevice,” (cid:15) U.S. PatentApplicationNo. 2-11150-904,filedJune 2000,pending. D. N. Maywar, Y. Nakano, and G. P. Agrawal, “All-Optical Flip–Flop Device (cid:15) Using a Resonant-Type Semiconductor Optical Amplifier,” Japanese Patent ApplicationNo.11-351397,filedDecember1999, pending. vi Acknowledgments IamdeeplygratefultoProfessorGovindAgrawalforamulti-facetedandreward- ing doctoralexperience. He shared a tremendousamountof timewithme — Ivalue our conversations on physics, mathematics, modeling, time budgeting, and on the process and techniques of writing technical papers. I am indebted to the flexibility andencouragementheprovidedtoexploremanyaspectsofresearch,includingpaper writing,conferencepresentations, patents, andoverseas research. I am privileged to have spent a year with Professor Yoshiaki Nakano at the Uni- versity of Tokyo. I am thankful to him for the great deal of time he spent with me, and for supporting and believing in me whole heartedly; flip–flopexperiments were successful because ofhis enthusiasticsupportthroughoutthe year. I thank Fouad El-Diasty for his technical assistance and for sharing with me his joyofexperimentsandapproachtoresearch. I amgratefulto ProfessorThomas Brownforintroducingme to distributedfeed- backand tosemiconductorlasers. I greatly appreciate the help that the staff at the Institute of Optics has provided during my graduate studies. In particular, I would like to thank Brian Mcintyre and ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vii Don Schertler for their Macintosh help and humor. Also, I am very grateful to Joan Christian for helping me prepare this thesis and for relaying the NSF funds to me whileIwasinTokyo, whichinvolvedmonthlypaperworkandtripstomyRochester bank. I acknowledge financial support from the Institute of Optics, the Rochester The- oryCenter(RTC),theU.S.DepartmentofEducation,andtheNationalScienceFoun- dation (NSF), which funded the year in Tokyo. I am grateful to Professor Agrawal andtheRTCforcoveringjournalpublicationcharges,andtoProfessorAgrawal,Pro- fessorNakanoandtheUniversityofTokyo,andNewFocusforprovidingtravelfunds forconferences. I thank John Marciante, Rene-Jean Essiambre, Stojan Radic, and Guido van Tartwijk for their friendship, support, and lively group meetings duringmy first two yearsofdoctoralresearch. StojanandGuido,inparticular,wereinstrumentalinstart- ingmyeducationonbistabilityandsemiconductorphysics,respectively. Ialsothank Zhi Liaoand Taras Lakobafortheirgoodhumorduringthefinalyear. I am gratefulforthe friendshipsmade with my classmates at the Institute of Op- tics. I especially thank Luis de Araujo, whose companionshipgreatly eased the pain of the first year, and was a treasure throughout the whole graduate program. I also thank David Aronstein, a great friend and inspiration to me. He has a wonderful grasponmathandphysics, matchedbyanabilitytoexplainthem. Iamverygrateful forhishelp inpreparationforand duringmyyearin Tokyo, and inproofreadingand ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS viii formattingthis thesis. I enjoyedhis good cheer, perspective, and sense ofhumor, all ofwhichIwillmiss verymuch. I am gratefulto the members of Professor Nakano’s research group for welcom- ing me. In particular, I thank Daisuke Inoue, Masaki Kato, and Gernot Schlo¨gl for theirtechnicalassistance. IamindebtedtoM.Funabashi,T.Yamaguchi,K.Shimizu, Y.Katagiri,andByongjinMaforvitalexperimentalequipment,andthankM.Tsuru- sawa for his encouragement of the flip–flopexperiment. I also thank Takuro Tajima forhiscompanionship,andthankGernotforjoiningmeinrenovatingRoom302and forhelpingme wrapup. IthankRickRobbins—hisphonecallsandvisitstoRochesterandTokyobrought a freshperspectiveandmuch-neededenergy. Ithankthearchitects ofWhippleParkforcreatingsucha beautifuland nurturing environment. I am deeply grateful to my mom and dad for encouraging me to pursue my edu- cation, for teaching me the value of experiences, and for their love. Phone calls and holiday gatherings with my mom, dad, my brother Eric, and my sister Donna have meanta lottome. I am blessed to have become fatherto Ian James duringgraduateschool. Ithank himforhis company, laughter,andlove. Most of all, I thank my wife, Rie. She has graced my life with her support, understanding, and love. I thank her for her sacrifice as I pursued my goals and ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ix dreams in graduate school. Rie, I love you very much, and hope to return such generositytoyouin ournew lifetogether. x Abstract We studythe nonlinearresponse andsignal-processing capabilitiesofdistributed feedback semiconductor optical amplifiers, and seek to advance their application to opticalcommunicationnetworks. BistabilityoccurringforopticalsignalstunednearaBraggresonanceisusefulfor switching and memory applications, but traditionally exhibits a limited wavelength range. We relax this constraint by varying the grating pitch along the length of the distributed feedback amplifier. A transfer-matrix method is developed for simulat- ing this improvement, and for studying changes in the shape of the hysteresis curve throughoutthiswavelengthrange. Wepredictanewhysteresis-curveshapeonreflec- tion,and showhowthegrating-pitchvariationcansuppress orenhance thisshape. Optical memory based on bistability is useful for sequential signal-processing applications, but previous control techniques operate with wavelengths only in the vicinityofthebistable-signalwavelength. Wepropose, model,anddemonstratecon- troltechniquesviaauxiliaryopticalsignalsthatexhibitaverywidewavelengthrange. Setandresetsignals varytherefractiveindexinoppositewaysand shiftthe upward- anddownward-switchingthresholds,respectively,ofthehysteresiscurvethroughthe

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