1. Introduction
The development of narrow-linewidth near-IR and mid-IR sources of coherent light based on lasing or nonlinear optical effects is in demand for manifold applications and fundamental research. Raman lasers allow generating narrow-line coherent light in spectral ranges inaccessible to “conventional” lasers operating at radiative transitions of rare-earth ions (Yb
3+, Er
3+, Tm
3+, etc.) [
1]. In Raman lasers, thanks to inelastic light scattering, the pump light may, in principle, be converted to the low-frequency range throughout the transparency band of a chosen material (with appropriate pump sources) [
2,
3]. For rare-earth ion-doped lasers, the pump frequency must belong to a certain absorption band of the used rare-earth ions, while there is no such strict limitation on pump frequency for Raman lasers [
1]. For Raman lasers, the frequency shift of the generated Raman wave with respect to the pump frequency (Δ
fR) depends on the material properties (and often corresponds to the frequency of the maximum gain). It is well known that cascade Raman lasing can be achieved when the generated coherent Raman wave itself serves as a pump for the generation of a second-order coherent Raman wave; then, the generated second-order Raman wave serves as a pump for the generation of a third-order coherent Raman wave, and so on [
3,
4]. Thus, the frequency of the second-order Raman wave is down-shifted by 2 × Δ
fR relative to the pump frequency, the frequency of the third-order Raman wave is down-shifted by 3 × Δ
fR, and the frequency of the
Nth-order Raman wave is down-shifted by
N × Δ
fR. Therefore, multicascade Raman lasers can provide frequency tuning in a wide frequency range, which may be important for many applications and fundamental problems.
Raman lasers are based on different materials, including bulk elements made of crystals and glasses [
5,
6], glass fibers [
3,
7], gas-filled fibers [
8,
9], microresonators made of glass and crystalline materials [
10,
11], gases in cells [
12], and others. An active medium and a resonator are frequently required for creating lasers, including Raman ones [
1] (although random distributed feedback (DFB) lasers with a mirrorless open cavity are also known [
13]). Mirrors and reflective coatings, as well as Bragg gratings in the case of fiber lasers, can serve as a resonator [
3]. When working with cascade Raman lasers, a resonator is usually required for each wavelength (exceptions are DFB lasers [
14]). For example, for fiber lasers, several pairs of Bragg gratings corresponding to the number of Raman cascades can be used [
15]. However, a microresonator with whispering gallery modes (WGMs) is simultaneously a gain medium and a cavity for a Raman microlaser including multicascade ones [
10,
11,
16]. A dielectric resonator with WGMs can trap photons by total internal reflection ensuring light propagation along its equator [
10]. Such microresonators have huge Q-factors and large nonlinearity due to extremely small mode volume, which make it possible to attain nonlinear effects at very low pump powers [
10,
11,
16]. It is known that Raman generation is observed in WGM microresonators in many cascades (for example, the number of cascades was five in silica [
16] and chalcogenide As
2S
3 [
17] microspheres, and eight in a CaF
2 microdisk [
18]). At the same time, it is rather problematic to obtain Raman generation with a large number of cascades in more traditional systems with separated active medium and resonators. Therefore, if the development of a miniature, low-power narrow-line coherent light source with a low-power consumption and a huge pump frequency tuning range is required, a multicascade Raman WGM microlaser seems to be an excellent solution.
When developing a Raman WGM microlaser, special attention should be paid to the choice of material, since Raman amplification properties vary greatly for different media. For instance, for a standard silica glass, the maximum gain is 10
–13 m/W (for a pump wavelength of 1 μm), and the Raman frequency shift corresponding to this value is Δ
fR = 13.2 THz [
2]. For crystalline materials such as CaF
2 widely used for fabricating WGM microdisks, the maximum Raman gain has the same order but the Raman shift is lower (~10 THz) [
18]. In recent years, special soft glasses with huge nonlinearity and a wide transparency range (with mid-IR red border) have been attracting increasing attention. For widespread chalcogenide As
2S
3 and As
2Se
3 glasses, the Raman gains are 4.3 × 10
−12 m/W [
19] and 5.1 × 10
−11 m/W [
20], respectively. However, their Raman shifts are relatively low: ~10 THz [
19] and ~7 THz [
20], respectively. Against this background, special tellurite glasses with a transparency band of ~0.5–5 μm and Raman gains of two orders of magnitude higher than the value for silica glass and the frequency shift corresponding to a maximum of 20–28 THz [
21,
22] seem to be very promising materials for the implementation of multicascade mid-IR WGM microlasers, even with a pump wavelength belonging to the well-mastered telecommunication range. We recently demonstrated Raman lasing in a tellurite TeO
2-WO
3-La
2O
3 (TWL) microsphere (for the first time for tellurite microresonators) [
23]. In this case, the maximum wavelength in the second cascade was 2.01 μm with a pump at 1.57 μm [
23]. It should be noted that we previously achieved the same wavelength with the same pump source in a chalcogenide As
2S
3 microsphere but in the fourth cascade [
24]. In both cases, we used a silica fiber taper to extract the generated Raman waves. This taper has huge losses at wavelengths >2 μm, so we could not register generation in higher cascades.
Here, we propose and theoretically study multicascade Raman microlasers based on TeO
2–WO
3–Bi
2O
3 (TWB) glass with a maximum Raman gain 120 times exceeding the maximum Raman gain of silica glass [
22]. This glass also has a huge Raman frequency shift of Δ
fR~27.5 THz [
22], which allows broadband frequency conversion using a reasonable number of cascades. It is important to note that since tellurite glasses have a relatively low glass transition temperature (
Tg~370 °C for TWB glass [
25]), it is necessary to take into consideration the heating of the microresonator during partial pump thermalization and to control that the maximum temperature should remain below
Tg, which is also taken into account in the simulation. We investigate a realistic design of microlasers and demonstrate numerically their mid-IR operation using a standard telecom pump wavelength. To the best of our knowledge, the mid-IR tellurite glass Raman WGM microlasers have not been previously studied.
2. Materials and Methods
We considered the scheme of a TWB glass WGM microlaser shown in
Figure 1a. We assumed that a fiber taper made of tellurite glass was used to couple the pump light and extract the generated coherent Raman waves. The pump wavelength was taken to be 1.57 μm (corresponding to a frequency of 191 THz), as in our previous experimental work [
23].
The cascade scheme of Raman processes is presented in
Figure 1b. We took into account that the maximum Raman gain is inversely proportional to the pump wavelength [
2]. The model Raman gain function of TWB glass in comparison with the Raman gain function of silica glass is plotted in the inset in
Figure 1b based on the data presented in [
22]. The expected frequencies in the Raman cascades were 191 THz − 27.5 THz = 163.5 THz (in the first cascade), 191 THz − 2 × 27.5 THz = 136 THz (in the second cascade), 191 THz − 3 × 27.5 THz = 108.5 THz (in the third cascade), and 191 THz − 4 × 27.5 THz = 81 THz (in the fourth cascade). So, the expected wavelengths of Raman waves in the first, second, third, and fourth cascades were 1.83 µm, 2.21 µm, 2.77 µm, and 3.70 µm, respectively. The fifth cascade was not expected here because the corresponding frequency 191 THz − 5 × 27.5 THz = 53.5 THz (wavelength of 5.6 µm) was beyond the transparency range of TWB glass.
2.1. Numerical Model for Multicascade Raman Lasing
The theoretical study of multicascade Raman lasing according to the scheme shown in
Figure 1a was performed using the coupled mode theory for intracavity electric field amplitudes
Uk. We used the well-known model for cascade microlasers [
16]:
where
U0 corresponds to the electric field pump wave at angular frequency
ω0 and
Uk corresponds to the Raman wave generated in the
k-th cascade at angular frequency
ωk;
t is the time; Δ
ω0 is the angular frequency detuning of the pump frequency from the nearest exact resonance;
P0 is the pump power;
τs is the total photon lifetime at
ωs (
s = 0, 1,…
N,
τs =
Qs/
ωs, where
Qs is the loaded Q-factor);
κs is the coupling coefficient (we set
κs = 1/(2 ×
τs)); and
is the intraresonator Raman gain coefficient proportional to the maximum Raman gain for bulk TWB glass
with allowance for wavelength scaling (
Figure 1b):
where
c is the speed of light,
nTWB is the linear refractive index of TWB glass,
Vk and
Vk−1 are effective mode volumes
Veff in the
kth and (
k − 1)th cascades, and
Г is the overlap factor between the waves in the
kth and (
k − 1)th cascades (we estimated and set
Г = 0.7). The effective mode volume
Veff for a microsphere with diameter
d (
Figure 2a) is calculated as
where
Sφ is the azimuthal projection of the Pointing vector and
d is the microsphere diameter. For calculating
Veff the spatial distribution of the WGM electromagnetic field as well as the WGM eigenfrequency are needed. The eigenmodes of a dielectric sphere are a well-known problem in electrodynamics; the characteristic equations and expressions for electric and magnetic fields can be found in [
26]. We solved the characteristic equations numerically to determine the WGM eigenfrequency for a microsphere of a specific diameter near target wavelength. Next, we used it to calculate the electromagnetic field distribution and then performed the integration procedure to obtain
Veff as in Equation (5). We considered only TE fundamental WGMs in all calculations. The obtained effective mode volumes
Veff as a function of the light wavelength
λ for microspheres of different diameter (
d = 40 μm,
d = 60 μm,
d = 80 μm, and
d = 100 μm) are presented in
Figure 2b. As expected, the smaller the microsphere, the smaller the effective mode volume.
The output power in a Raman wave is Pk = κk|Ak|2. We considered continuous wave operation; so, the left-hand sides of Equations (1)–(3) were zero, (dUs/dt = 0). The system of equations became algebraic and was easily solved analytically. We successively considered all regimes of Raman lasing: when only one Raman wave in the first cascade could be generated (in this case, Equations (1) and (3) for N = 1 were used); when two Raman waves in the first and second cascades were generated (the system of Equations (1)–(3) was written for three equations at N = 2); when three cascades were generated (the system of Equations (1)–(3) was written for four equations at N = 3); and when four cascades were generated (the system of Equations (1)–(3) was written for five equations at N = 4). As noted above, the Raman lasing in the fifth cascade was not considered, as the corresponding wavelength of 5.6 µm was beyond the transparency band of TWB glass.
We neglected four-wave mixing processes (between pump, Raman Stokes and anti-Stokes photons and other combinations of pump and Raman waves). However, it is known that when phase matching conditions are met, anti-Stokes light components can be generated with reasonable efficiencies in microresonators even with a normal dispersion [
27,
28]. We checked using the previously implemented model [
29] that for our resonators the phase matching conditions are not met. The calculated second-order dispersion coefficients
β2 vs. wavelength are plotted in
Figure 2c.
2.2. Numerical Model for Microsphere Heating under Partial Pump Thermalization
The thermo-optical heating was studied using a theoretical model based on finding the temperature distributions in a TWB glass microsphere during pump power thermalization. The corresponding problem of thermodynamics can be expressed via the heat equation [
30]:
where Δ
T is the temperature increase,
ρ is the glass density,
cp is the glass heat capacity at constant pressure,
ϕ is the heat flux density,
Q is the heat source, and
k is the glass thermal conductivity. We used the following parameters of the tellurite glass:
ρ = 5940 kg/m
3,
cp = 370 J/(kg·K), and
k = 1.2 W/(m·K).
We developed a numerical model employing the finite element method (FEM) for calculating the spatial distribution of the temperature increase Δ
T. As in a real experiment, a microsphere is usually supported by a fiber stem that influences the heat flow, and the calculations were performed for a realistic axially symmetric geometry demonstrated in
Figure 2a. It should be noted that
Figure 2a shows only a part of the model omitting the rest of the relatively long (several mm) fiber stem. On all surfaces we chose the boundary condition of free convection in air [
30]:
where
ϕnorm is the outward-pointing component of the heat flow density vector and
αconv is the convection coefficient. We used empirical relations for
αconv [
30].
We assumed that heating occurs only in a small near-surface region of a microsphere with elliptical cross-section (marked red in
Figure 2a); this is done to mimic partial pump power absorption in a highly localized WGM. The total heating power
Pheat is evenly distributed over this region and its total volume should coincide with the effective mode volume
Veff.
4. Discussion and Conclusions
To conclude, we proposed and theoretically investigated multicascade Raman microlasers based on soft tellurite TeO
2–WO
3–Bi
2O
3 glass WGM microresonators which can operate in the near-IR and mid-IR with a narrow-line pump in the telecommunication range. We assumed that a tellurite fiber taper (transparent in the near-IR and mid-IR) can be used to couple the pump light into a microsphere and extract the generated Raman waves from it. We considered a realistic design and performed a detailed theoretical study using the experimental parameters of the glass reported in [
22] and the experimental parameters of the microspheres produced previously from a similar tellurite TeO
2–WO
3–La
2O
3 glass [
23]. Thanks to the large Raman gain (120 times exceeding the maximum Raman gain of silica glass) and a huge Raman frequency shift of 27.5 THz for this glass (against 13.2 THz for silica glass), the Raman waves at 1.83 µm, 2.21 µm, 2.77 µm, and 3.7 µm in the first, second, third, and fourth cascades, respectively, with a pump wavelength of 1.57 µm were demonstrated. Previously, we experimentally achieved two-cascade Raman lasing in a 30 μm microsphere made of TeO
2–WO
3–La
2O
3 glass with the frequency shift ~21 THz [
23]. The Raman wavelength in the second cascade was 2.01 μm [
23]. Experimental measurements were in good agreement with simulations performed using a similar general approach, confirming the validity of our model. Here, we extended the theoretical model to include Raman cascades beyond the second order. We believe that multicascade Raman lasing can be observed in optimized experiments.
We also solved a thermo-optical problem using the finite element method to show that the temperature of a soft glass microresonator heated due to partial thermalization of pump power remains below the glass transition temperature (for reasonable pump powers). The smaller the microsphere, the higher the temperature increase. It was demonstrated that the maximum temperature increase in the equatorial region, where the main pump thermalization occurs, exceeds the temperature increase averaged over the entire microsphere by only about 10%.
To describe multicascade Raman lasing, we used the coupled mode theory. We analyzed in detail the influence of different factors on the characteristics of the generated Raman waves, such as microsphere diameters, Q-factors, pump powers, and detuning of the pump frequency from exact resonance. The higher the Q-factor, the lower the pump power threshold for Raman lasing. The larger the microsphere, the higher the pump power threshold. So, on the one hand, small microspheres seem to be most suitable for multicascade Raman lasing. On the other hand, the temperature increase for them is maximal. Therefore, we can say that for the proposed experimental implementation, it may be better to work with microspheres with intermediate diameters (about 60 μm), for which the pump power thresholds are quite low and, at the same time, the temperature remains below Tg.
To the best of our knowledge, the mid-IR tellurite glass Raman WGM microlasers have not been studied before. We believe that this work can serve as a guide in the development of promising miniature multicascade mid-IR WGM microlasers, which may find many applications.