Pre-Chirp-Managed Adiabatic Soliton Compression in Pressure-Gradient Hollow-Core Fibers

: Post-pulse-compression is demanded to produce energetic few-cycle pulses. We propose pre-chirp-managed adiabatic soliton compression (ASC) in gas-ﬁlled pressure-gradient hollow-core ﬁbers to suppress the detrimental pedestals and therefore signiﬁcantly improve the compressed pulse quality. We show that two-stage ASC can compress 125 µ J, 130 fs pulses at 2 µ m to a nearly two-cycle pulse 15 fs in duration. Our analytical analysis suggests that ASC is in favor of compressing pulses centered at a longer wavelength. As an example, a 280 µ J, 220 fs Gaussian pulse at 4 µ m is compressed to 60 fs with minimal pedestals. We expect that the resulting high-quality, energetic few-cycle pulses will ﬁnd important applications in high-ﬁeld science. Contributions: Conceptualization, R.C. R.C. Z.S.; R.C. G.C.; funding


Introduction
High-energy (>100 µJ) few-cycle optical pulses with high average power (>100 W) are increasingly demanded by high-field science. To date, nearly all these powerful and energetic pulses are obtained via post-compression of relatively long pulses [1]. In general, pulse compression techniques can be divided into two types: (1) nonlinear spectral broadening followed by a dispersive device for proper phase compensation and (2) soliton self-compression without further phase removal. Both types of compression involve strong nonlinear light-matter interaction such that the optical pulse acquires a huge nonlinear phase, resulting in substantial spectral broadening. In the first type of pulse compression (e.g., multi-plate compression), the spectrally broadened pulse develops frequency chirp and thus requires dispersive devices such as chirped mirrors for pulse dechirping to generate a few-cycle pulse. In contrast, the second type of compression relies on the formation of a high-order soliton as a result of pulse propagation in a waveguide with Kerr nonlinearity and negative group-velocity dispersion (GVD). More specifically, an input pulse given enough energy evolves into a high-order soliton inside the waveguide and experiences spectral broadening. Such evolution leads to a compressed, chirp-free pulse, which does not need an extra dechirping device. Although both types of pulse compression techniques are successful in producing high-power, energetic few-cycle pulses, they suffer one common drawback: the compressed pulse exhibits a relatively large pedestal, which compromises its applications in high-field science. This unwanted pedestal in the first type of compression arises from the uncompensated high-order spectral phase; for the second type, it originates from the intrinsic property of a high-order soliton.
Besides high-order soliton compression, compressed chirp-free pulses can also be obtained using adiabatic soliton compression (ASC) [2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]. ASC differs from high-order soliton compression in that the pulse to be compressed evolves into a fundamental soliton as propagating in a waveguide with negative GVD. A fundamental soliton results from a balance between Kerr nonlinearity and GVD, and hence increasing the nonlinearity or decreasing the GVD along the pulse propagation renders a gradual decrease in the pulse duration to reinforce a local nonlinearity-GVD balance [2]. Consequently, the input pulse is continuously compressed along the propagation. Despite the perturbation by high-order nonlinearities and dispersion, the compressed pulse stays close to be a fundamental soliton, and the pedestal is significantly suppressed.
ASC has been demonstrated to achieve pulse compression in single-mode fibers with amplification [3][4][5], dispersion-decreasing fibers [6][7][8][9], and non-uniform grating structures [10]. All these demonstrations were achieved in fibers with solid cores. Recent years have seen intense research on nonlinear optical phenomena arising from propagation of femtosecond pulses inside gas-filled hollow-core fibers (HCFs) [11]. These HCFs are widely used to implement the above-mentioned two types of pulse compression [1]. However, ASC in gas-filled hollow-core fibers is rarely investigated. Laegsgaard et al. presented a theoretical study on ASC limited by third-order dispersion and the Raman effect in photonic bandgap fibers [12]. Huang et al. experimentally studied ASC in the presence of strong ionization, which demonstrated a 300 nm blueshift of the soliton central wavelength [13]. In this paper, we study the ASC of femtosecond pulses in pressure-gradient HCFs, with the focus on how to optimize the process to produce high-quality, pedestal-free few-cycle pulses. We show that introducing positive pre-chirp to the pulse prior to compression facilitates ASC and improves the compressed pulse quality. The pedestal stays~30 dB below the pulse peak. We further demonstrate that two-stage ASC can generate two-cycle pulses at 2 µm. We also discuss the performance of ASC in compressing pulses centered at 4 µm.

Simple Analysis of ASC in Pressure-Gradient HCFs Based on the Soliton Area Theorem
According to Ref. [14], the GVD of the fundamental mode in an HCF is given by where ρ r is the gas density relative to standard conditions, c the speed of light in vacuum, u 01 the first zero of the zeroth-order Bessel function of the first kind, and a the core radius. f (ω) = ∂ ω χ (1) + ω∂ 2 ω χ (1) /2, and ∂ ω is the derivative with respect to the frequency ω. χ (1) (ω) is the linear susceptibility of the gas. Equation (1) shows that GVD includes two contributions: (1) positive gas dispersion and (2) negative waveguide dispersion.
The Kerr nonlinear parameter of the gas is defined by γ = n 2 ω 0 / cA e f f , where n 2 is the nonlinear index coefficient. A e f f ≈ 1.65a 2 is the effective mode area for a negativecurvature HCF (e.g., antiresonant HCF) [15]. The nonlinear parameter is related to the gas density and fiber core radius by where n 20 corresponds to the nonlinear index coefficient of the gas under standard conditions. The well-known soliton area theorem connects the pulse energy E 0 and the full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) of the fundamental soliton, T 0 , written as Plugging Equations (1) and (2) into Equation (3) and considering ρ r being proportional to pressure p, we obtain the following equation: and A 2 = 5.8 f (ω 0 ) ω 0 n 20 . p atm is set at 1 atm. Equation (4) clearly shows that increasing the gas pressure along an HCF can effectively decrease the pulse duration. Indeed, pressure-gradient HCFs are widely employed to control the nonlinear interaction between the filled noble gas and the optical pulse [16][17][18]. Equation (4) seems to suggest that increasing the input pulse energy is another efficient way of shorting the pulse duration. However, an increased pulse energy and reduced duration may result in high enough peak power that causes strong ionization and therefore degrades the compressed pulse quality. To avoid detrimental ionization effects, we set a limit to the gas ionization such that the variation of the refractive index induced by gas ionization is less than the index variation induced by the Kerr effect. Such a limit leads to following equation that connects the pulse energy, the pulse duration, and the fiber core radius [19]: where α 0.45 and β 0.51. A 3 is a constant, which depends on the filled gas. A combination of Equations (4) and (5) determines the maximum input pulse energy and the minimum pulse duration at the output of the pressure-gradient HCF: p out is the gas pressure at the fiber output. In most cases, the gas dispersion is much smaller than the waveguide dispersion, and therefore Equations (6) and (7) are further simplified as Figure 1 shows the dependence of E max and T min on the HCF core radius at different gas pressure values. We assume the HCF is filled with helium and the pulse is centered at 2 µm, which leads to A 3 ≈ 12.6 µm fs α /µJ β . Given that the helium pressure at the HCF output is fixed, E max increases and T min decreases as the fiber core radius is increased. At a fixed fiber core radius, increasing the helium pressure reduces both E max and T min .
Recent years have seen a huge effort to develop high-energy few-cycle pulses with the center wavelength at~4 µm, aiming for driving high-harmonic generation to extend the cut-off energy and produce keV photons [20,21]. These pulses were obtained via postcompression of initial~100-fs pulses delivered by optical parametric amplifiers. Indeed, ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs is in favor of compressing high-energy pulses at a longer wavelength. Besides the fiber core radius and gas pressure, two other parameters, A 1 and A 3 , appear in Equations (8) and (9). A 3 is weakly dependent on the pulse wavelength, and it is 13.9 µm fs α /µJ β at 4 µm. However, A 1 is proportional to the fourth power of the wavelength. As Equation (8) shows, increasing the center wavelength from 2 µm to 4 µm can increase E max by a factor of~4. Figure 2 shows the dependence of E max and T min on the core radius of an HCF at different helium pressure values for the pulse centered at 4 µm.
The results indicate that ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs is able to compress sub-mJ pulses at 4 µm. Recent years have seen a huge effort to develop high-energy few-cycle pulses with the center wavelength at ~4 μm, aiming for driving high-harmonic generation to extend the cut-off energy and produce keV photons [20,21]. These pulses were obtained via postcompression of initial ~100-fs pulses delivered by optical parametric amplifiers. Indeed, ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs is in favor of compressing high-energy pulses at a longer wavelength. Besides the fiber core radius and gas pressure, two other parameters, and , appear in Equations (8) and (9).
is weakly dependent on the pulse wavelength, and it is 13.9 μm • fs /μJ at 4 μm. However, is proportional to the fourth power of the wavelength. As Equation (8) shows, increasing the center wavelength from 2 μm to 4 μm can increase by a factor of ~4. Figure 2 shows the dependence of and on the core radius of an HCF at different helium pressure values for the pulse centered at 4 μm. The results indicate that ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs is able to compress sub-mJ pulses at 4 μm.

Simulation Results and Discussion
Although Equations (8) and (9) predict the maximum pulse energy and the minimum pulse duration as a function of the HCF radius and the filled gas pressure, they provide  Recent years have seen a huge effort to develop high-energy few-cycle pulses with the center wavelength at ~4 μm, aiming for driving high-harmonic generation to extend the cut-off energy and produce keV photons [20,21]. These pulses were obtained via postcompression of initial ~100-fs pulses delivered by optical parametric amplifiers. Indeed, ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs is in favor of compressing high-energy pulses at a longer wavelength. Besides the fiber core radius and gas pressure, two other parameters, and , appear in Equations (8) and (9).
is weakly dependent on the pulse wavelength, and it is 13.9 μm • fs /μJ at 4 μm. However, is proportional to the fourth power of the wavelength. As Equation (8) shows, increasing the center wavelength from 2 μm to 4 μm can increase by a factor of ~4. Figure 2 shows the dependence of and on the core radius of an HCF at different helium pressure values for the pulse centered at 4 μm. The results indicate that ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs is able to compress sub-mJ pulses at 4 μm.

Simulation Results and Discussion
Although Equations (8) and (9) predict the maximum pulse energy and the minimum pulse duration as a function of the HCF radius and the filled gas pressure, they provide

Simulation Results and Discussion
Although Equations (8) and (9) predict the maximum pulse energy and the minimum pulse duration as a function of the HCF radius and the filled gas pressure, they provide no information about the compressed pulse quality. To further investigate the ASC process in detail, we solve the generalized nonlinear Schrödinger equation (GNLSE), taking into account dispersion, Kerr nonlinearity, and ionization effects [22]: where ψ corresponds to the complex field envelope of the pulse and β m denotes the m th -order dispersion coefficient calculated at the center frequency ω 0 . I p , N e , and A e f f represent the gas ionization energy, the free-electron density, and the effective mode area, respectively. The plasma frequency ω p is given by ω p = e 2 N e /(ε 0 m e ) 0.5 , where ε 0 is the vacuum permittivity, e the electronic charge, and m e the electron mass. The free electron density N e is given by [23]: where W(t) is the ionization rate and N 0 is the density of gas atoms. The effects of electron attachment and recombination are neglected in Equation (2) for pulses shorter than 1 ps. In this letter, we use Ammosov-Delone-Krainov (ADK) theory to calculate the ionization rate W(t) [24]: where ω tr = I p / is the transition frequency and n * = Z I ph /I p 0.5 is the effective principal quantum number. ω t = e|E(z, t)| 2m e I p −0.5 is the tunneling frequency, in which the carrier-resolved electric field E(z, t) is given by E(z, t) = 2/ε 0 n 0 cA e f f ψ(z, t), and n 0 is the linear refractive index. |C n * | 2 = 2 2n * [n * Γ(n * + 1)Γ(n * )] −1 , where Z is the net resulting charge of the ion, I ph is the ionization energy of the hydrogen atom, and Γ(x) is the Euler gamma function. It is noteworthy that Equation (10) remains valid even as the pulse duration approaches one carrier oscillation cycle [25]. For a pressure-gradient HCF, the gas pressure along the fiber is given by p 0 and p L denote the pressure at the fiber input end and the output end, respectively. L represents the fiber length.
In the first simulation, we investigate the ASC of pulses at 2 µm in antiresonant HCFs, which feature a large mode area, low transmission loss, negative dispersion, and broadband transmission [26]. We assume that the antiresonant HCF is 8 m long with a core radius of 28 µm filled with helium with the pressure varying from p 0 = 0.6 bar to p L = 2.6 bar. The input pulse is a transform-limited Gaussian pulse centered at 2 µm with 100 µJ pulse energy and 110 fs duration. These pulses can be experimentally obtained by state-of-the-art high-power Tm-fiber amplifier systems [18]. Figure 3a shows the pulse evolution along the fiber in the logarithmic scale. Due to increased gas pressure leading to a reduced group velocity, the center of gravity of the pulse shifts toward a later time. The central part of the pulse becomes narrower continuously during the propagation of the first 5 m; for further propagation, it becomes wider and then narrower again. During the propagation, the ionization is minimal, as expected. The black curve in Figure 3b plots the FWHM of the pulse as a function of the propagation distance, and the blue curve shows the FWHM of the corresponding fundamental soliton that shares the same energy and nonlinear coefficient as the pulse propagating in the HCF. Clearly, the pulse duration oscillates around the fundamental soliton duration, indicating that the pulse adiabatically evolves into a fundamental soliton.
The quality of a pulse is quantified by the Strehl ratio defined by the peak-power ratio between the compressed pulse and the transform-limited pulse. A pulse with a Strehl ratio of~0.8 is regarded as a decent pulse. However, most high-energy pulses obtained by post-compression exhibit much lower Strehl ratios, with a large portion of energy shed in pedestals and satellite pulses. Figure 3c plots the output pulse (black curve), the transform-limited pulse calculated from the output spectrum (red dashed curve), and the fundamental soliton determined by the dispersion/nonlinearity at the fiber output (blue curve). The input 110 fs pulse is compressed to 38 fs, which is close to the transform-limited pulse with the Strehl ratio reaching as high as~0.99. The pedestal stays >28 dB below the pulse peak; the central part of the compressed pulse has an excellent overlap with the fundamental soliton pulse and contains 97.5% of the total pulse energy. The results in Figure 3b shows that the pulse evolves toward a fundamental soliton. However, the output spectrum (Figure 3d) clearly indicates that the compressed pulse deviates much from an ideal fundamental soliton that features a spectrum of hyperbolic secant shape. It is well known that pre-chirping the input pulse into an optical fiber can be used to control the nonlinear propagation. The pre-chirp management technique has been applied to nonlinear pulse amplification [27,28], delivery of femtosecond pulses [29][30][31], nonlinear pulse compression [32][33][34], dispersive wave generation [35], soliton self-frequency shift [36], and self-phase modulation enabled spectral selection for generating widely tunable femtosecond pulses [37]. Here we propose to pre-chirp the input pulse to control ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs. Figure 4 shows the simulation results corresponding to the ASC of a positively chirped pulse. In the simulation, we added 2000 fs 2 group-delay dispersion (GDD) to positively pre-chirp the 100 µJ, 110 fs Gaussian pulse to a duration of 120 fs. All other parameters remained unchanged. Figure 4a plots the pulse evolution. A comparison between Figures 3a and 4a shows that introducing pre-chirp reduces the duration oscillation of the central part in the compressed pulse. This is more evidently revealed by the results in Figure 4b: due to the negative GVD, the positively chirped pulse is shortened more rapidly at the beginning of the compression; the FWHM of the compressed pulse quickly converges to the FWHM of the fundamental soliton after 3 m propagation. At the HCF output, the optical spectrum (black curve in Figure 4d) is close to the soliton spectrum (blue curve in Figure 4d). Consequently, compared with the ASC of the un-chirped pulse, pre-chirp-managed ASC leads to a compressed pulse with the pedestal further suppressed (Figure 4c). In this case, the pedestal stays >37 dB below the pulse peak. The input pre-chirped 120 fs pulse is compressed to 37 fs (corresponding to 5.5 cycles) with the Strehl ratio reaching as high as~0.99, and the central part of the compressed pulse contains 99% of the total pulse energy.
The results in Figure 4 demonstrate that pre-chirp-managed ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs can produce high-quality few-cycle pulses with the pedestal significantly suppressed. However, our extensive simulation shows that the compression ratio is limited to 3-4 to suppress the pedestal by more than 30 dB. This is caused by the characteristic pressure gradient determined by Equation (10): the square of the gas pressure increases linearly with the fiber length, and accordingly the adiabatic soliton duration drops sharply at the beginning of the HCF and then quickly flattens out. It is hard (if not impossible) to achieve a higher compression ratio via just pre-chirping the input pulse to reinforce the ASC. This drawback of low compression ratio can be alleviated by cascading the ASC in multiple stages.
The results in Figure 5 show two-stage pre-chirp-managed ASC that compresses an initial unchirped 125 µJ, 130 fs pulse down to 15 fs in duration. In the first stage, the 5-m-long HCF has a core radius of 30 µm, and the helium pressure varies from p 0 = 0.2 bar to p L = 1.4 bar. The 5-m-long HCF in the second stage has a core radius of 45 µm, and the helium pressure varies from p 0 = 0.5 bar to p L = 6 bar. We assume a coupling loss of 20% such that the pulse energy is reduced to 100 µJ at the input of the second HCF. Given the core difference (30 µm versus 45 µm) between the two HCFs, the first fiber has a GVD about 2.25 times larger than the second one, since gas dispersion is much smaller compared with waveguide dispersion. As the results in Refs. [38,39] have shown, a soliton experiencing an abrupt dispersion change may cause dispersive shedding and soliton degradation. Such a detrimental effect can be mitigated by introducing a finite-length fiber junction between the two fibers with a large dispersion difference [38,39]. In our situation, instead of adding a fiber junction, we properly pre-chirp the soliton before entering the second HCF to ensure ASC. More specifically, we add 2500 fs 2 (500 fs 2 ) GDD to the pulse at the input of the first (second) HCF. The input pulse is compressed to 54 fs inside the first HCF and then compressed to 15 fs by the second HCF corresponding to 2.3 optical cycles.
It is noteworthy that using gas-filled HCFs to self-compress 2 µm pulses to fewcycle duration has been experimentally demonstrated by several groups [18,40]. The selfcompression was based on high-order soliton compression, and therefore the compressed pulse quality was compromised. For example, Gebhardt et al. employed a 42 cm gasfilled antiresonant HCF to compress 34.4 µJ pulses centered at 1.8 µm from 110 fs to 13 fs. However, the compressed 2.1-cycle pulse has elongated pedestals that are less than 10 dB below the main peak [18]. Assisted by numerical simulation, the authors estimated that the central part of the pulse only includes 60% of the pulse energy [18]. In contrast, our results in Figure 5 show that two-stage pre-chirp-managed ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs can generate nearly pedestal-free nearly two-cycle pulses with~98% energy confined in the central part of the compressed pulse.
second HCF to ensure ASC. More specifically, we add 2500 fs 2 (500 fs 2 ) GDD to the pulse at the input of the first (second) HCF. The input pulse is compressed to 54 fs inside the first HCF and then compressed to 15 fs by the second HCF corresponding to 2.3 optical cycles.
It is noteworthy that using gas-filled HCFs to self-compress 2 μm pulses to few-cycle duration has been experimentally demonstrated by several groups [18,40]. The self-compression was based on high-order soliton compression, and therefore the compressed pulse quality was compromised. For example, Gebhardt et al. employed a 42 cm gas-filled antiresonant HCF to compress 34.4 μJ pulses centered at 1.8 μm from 110 fs to 13 fs. However, the compressed 2.1-cycle pulse has elongated pedestals that are less than 10 dB below the main peak [18]. Assisted by numerical simulation, the authors estimated that the central part of the pulse only includes 60% of the pulse energy [18]. In contrast, our results in Figure 5 show that two-stage pre-chirp-managed ASC in pressure-gradient HCFs can generate nearly pedestal-free nearly two-cycle pulses with ~98% energy confined in the central part of the compressed pulse.        The results in Figure 2 show that ASC is favorable for compressing pulses at a longer center wavelength. To verify this prediction based on analytical analysis, we simulate the propagation of a 280 µJ, 220 fs Gaussian pulse (240 fs after adding 8000 fs 2 GDD) centered at 4 µm inside an antiresonant HCF with a core radius of 40 µm. The HCF is filled with helium, with the pressure varying from p 0 = 1 bar to p L = 9 bar. The results in Figure 6 indicate that the pulse can be adiabatically compressed down to 60 fs in duration, corresponding to 4.5 optical cycles. The compressed pulse has a peak power of 4 GW, and the pedestal is about 35 dB below the peak. The results in Figure 2 show that ASC is favorable for compressing pulses at a longer center wavelength. To verify this prediction based on analytical analysis, we simulate the propagation of a 280 μJ, 220 fs Gaussian pulse (240 fs after adding 8000 fs 2 GDD) centered at 4 μm inside an antiresonant HCF with a core radius of 40 μm. The HCF is filled with helium, with the pressure varying from p0 = 1 bar to pL = 9 bar. The results in Figure 6 indicate that the pulse can be adiabatically compressed down to 60 fs in duration, corresponding to 4.5 optical cycles. The compressed pulse has a peak power of 4 GW, and the pedestal is about 35 dB below the peak. Equations (8) and (9) indicate that increasing the fiber core radius allows compressing pulses with higher energy to a shorter dispersion. We anticipate that energy scaling of ASC to compress >1 mJ pulses is possible by using capillary HCFs with the core radius exceeding 100 μm. In general, ASC requires meters-long propagation distance. Conventional capillary HCFs that are made of thick-walled rigid fused silica tubes are limited to ~1 m in length to avoid introducing propagation loss. ASC in this type of HCFs is unlikely possible. In contrast, stretched flexible HCFs (SF-HCFs) that feature much thinner walls (only tens of microns) are being widely used for post-pulse-compression. Thanks to the light weight, these HCFs can be kept straight to prevent excessive loss, even when their length is 6 m [41]. We expect that pressure-gradient SF-HCFs may allow ASC of >1 mJ pulses at 4 μm, and the resulting few-cycle high-quality pulses constitute an enabling tool for high-field applications.

Conclusions
In conclusion, we investigated ASC in gas-filled pressure-gradient HCFs. The maximum pulse energy and the minimum compressed pulse duration are dependent on the HCF core size, gas type and pressure, and the center wavelength. We show that properly pre-chirping the pulse prior to compression can accelerate the pulse compression rapidly converging to ASC, which results in improved pulse quality with the pedestal further suppressed. Despite a relatively low compression ratio from single-state ASC, we showed that two-stage ASC can offer a compression ratio of ~9. As a result, 130 fs pulses at 2 μm can be compressed to a nearly two-cycle pulse 15 fs in duration. We also showed that compression of pulses with al onger center wavelength is favored by ASC. For example, a 280 μJ, 220 fs Gaussian pulse at 4 μm can be compressed to 60 fs. Work is ongoing to Equations (8) and (9) indicate that increasing the fiber core radius allows compressing pulses with higher energy to a shorter dispersion. We anticipate that energy scaling of ASC to compress >1 mJ pulses is possible by using capillary HCFs with the core radius exceeding 100 µm. In general, ASC requires meters-long propagation distance. Conventional capillary HCFs that are made of thick-walled rigid fused silica tubes are limited to~1 m in length to avoid introducing propagation loss. ASC in this type of HCFs is unlikely possible. In contrast, stretched flexible HCFs (SF-HCFs) that feature much thinner walls (only tens of microns) are being widely used for post-pulse-compression. Thanks to the light weight, these HCFs can be kept straight to prevent excessive loss, even when their length is 6 m [41]. We expect that pressure-gradient SF-HCFs may allow ASC of >1 mJ pulses at 4 µm, and the resulting few-cycle high-quality pulses constitute an enabling tool for high-field applications.

Conclusions
In conclusion, we investigated ASC in gas-filled pressure-gradient HCFs. The maximum pulse energy and the minimum compressed pulse duration are dependent on the HCF core size, gas type and pressure, and the center wavelength. We show that properly pre-chirping the pulse prior to compression can accelerate the pulse compression rapidly converging to ASC, which results in improved pulse quality with the pedestal further suppressed. Despite a relatively low compression ratio from single-state ASC, we showed that two-stage ASC can offer a compression ratio of~9. As a result, 130 fs pulses at 2 µm can be compressed to a nearly two-cycle pulse 15 fs in duration. We also showed that compression of pulses with al onger center wavelength is favored by ASC. For example, a 280 µJ, 220 fs Gaussian pulse at 4 µm can be compressed to 60 fs. Work is ongoing to experimentally verify our theoretical predictions on ASC in gas-filled pressure-gradient HCFs.
Funding: This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (no. 11774234), the Guangdong Key R&D Program (no. 2018B090904003), and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (no. YJKYYQ20190034).