Optical Routing via High Efficiency Composite Acoustic Diffraction
Abstract
Acousto-optical modulation (AOM) is a powerful and widely used technique for rapidly controlling the frequency, phase, intensity, and direction of light. Based on Bragg diffraction, AOMs typically exhibit moderate diffraction efficiency, often less than 90\% even for collimated inputs. In this work, we demonstrate that this efficiency can be significantly improved using a composite (CP) setup comprising a pair of 4-F-linked AOMs, enabling beamsplitting with fully tunable splitting amplitude and phase. The efficiency enhancement arises from two effects, termed "momentum echo" and "high-order rephasing," which can be simultaneously optimized by adjusting the relative distance between the two AOMs. This method is resource-efficient, does not require ultra-collimation, and maintains control bandwidth. Experimentally, we achieved a diffraction efficiency exceeding 99\% (excluding insertion loss) and a 35 dB single-mode suppression of the 0th-order beam, demonstrating a full-contrast optical router with a switching time of less than 100~nanoseconds. Theoretically, we formulate the dynamics of CP-AOM in terms of multi-mode quantum control and discuss extensions beyond the configuration presented in this work. The substantially enhanced performance of CP-AOMs, coupled with reduced acoustic amplitude requirements, may significantly advance our ability to accurately control light at high speeds with low-loss acousto-optics.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2408.15051,
title = {Optical Routing via High Efficiency Composite Acoustic Diffraction},
author = {Yuxiang Zhao and Jiangyong Hu and Ruijuan Liu and Ruochen Gao and Yiming Li and Xiao Zhang and Huanfeng Zhu and Saijun Wu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.15051},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
Minor revision with improved clarity. 12 pages, 5 figures