Del Mar Photonics offers industry's most extensive portfolio of ultrafast
lasers
We offer femtosecond oscillators and amplifiers based on Ti:Sapphire
(Trestles, Teahupoo, Cortes), Cr:Forsterite (Mavericks, Jaws), Yb- Solid State
(Tourmaline-SS), Er-doped fiber
(Tamarack, Buccaneers) and Yb- doped fibers (Tourmaline series). Main
specifications of the basic standard models are summarized in the table below:
Laser brand-name | Brief description | Output parameters | Sample specifications | Pdf brochures |
Trestles | Ti:Sapphire oscillator | wavelength tuning range 710-950 nm (@6W pump); output power >600 mW (@6W pump, 800 nm) pulse duration <20 fs - 100 fs |
Trestles-100 without pump laser Ti:Sapphire oscillator having a tuning range of 710-950 nm (@6W pump); output power >600 mW (@6W pump, 800 nm); beam quality TEMoo; polarization - linear horizontal; pulse duration <100 fs; repetition rate 80 MHz |
Trestles
Ti:Sapphire laser Trestles Finesse Ti:Sapphire laser Manual Pump lasers HPG DPSS green laser Finesse DPSS green laser |
Teahupoo Rider | Ti:Sapphire one-box Oscillator/Amplifier |
|||
Mavericks | Cr:Forsterite oscillator | tuning range – 1230-1270nm output power – up to 1W pulse duration – 60 fs - 80 fs repetition rate – 120/76 MHz (fixed) |
Mavericks 65P Femtosecond Cr:Forsterite laser system Ytterbium pump laser included. tuning range – 1230-1270nm output power – 250 mW beam quality – TEMoo polarization – linear horizontal pulse duration – <65 fs repetition rate – 120/76 MHz (fixed) Electronic starter included. Peltier crystal head with temperature controller included. |
Mavericks Cr:Forsterite femtosecond lasers Multiphoton Imaging with Mavericks - introductory brochure New compact version of Mavericks CrF:65P chromium forsterite femtosecond laser
|
Tourmaline Yb-SS400 | Ytterbium-doped Solid- State Femtosecond Oscillator |
Wavelength, nm 1059±2 Pulse duration fs < 150 Output power, mW* >400 Repetition rate, MHz 80* |
Tourmaline Yb-SS400/150 Pulse duration (FWHM), fs < 150 Wavelength, nm 1059±2 Output power, mW* >400 Repetition rate, MHz 80* Output power stability** ± 1% (see graph) Spatial mode TEMoo Polarization, linear >100:1 (horizontal) Laser head dimensions, mm 710x165x110 Power supply dimensions, mm 230x200x85 |
Ytterbium-doped Solid- State
Femtosecond Oscillator |
Tamarack | Er-doped
fiber femtosecond oscillator |
Wavelength, nm 1560±10 Pulse Width, fs <80 - 250 Output power, mW >10 |
Tamarack 80 (RFQ) Pulse Width (FWHM), fs <80 Wavelength, nm 1560±10 Average output power, mW >10 Peak output power, kW up to 1 Repetition rate, MHz 70 Power output: 10 mW, TEM00, linearly polarized or fiber output (FC/APC) Laser head dimensions, mm 180x210x50 Power supply unit dimensions, mm 230x200x85 |
Tamarack
Er-doped femtosecond fiber laser |
Buccaneer | Er-doped
fiber femtosecond oscillator/amplifier |
Buccaneer 100 |
Buccaneer
Er-doped femtosecond fiber laser |
|
Buccaneer SHG | Er-doped
fiber femtosecond oscillator/amplifier +SHG |
Wavelength 780+-10 nm Pulse Width < 120 fs Output power >40 mW |
Buccaneer with a SHG unit Fiber laser with SH generation Pulse Width (FWHM) < 120 fs Wavelength 780+-10 nm (fixed) Average output power >40 mW Repetition rate 40 MHz Spectral width ~ 7.5 nm RF Out: SMA Mode lock status: SMA Polarization: vertical |
Buccaneer
Er-doped femtosecond fiber laser with build in SHG unit |
Tourmaline | Femtosecond Yb-based seed oscillator |
Output power 20mW Wavelength 1040-1064 nm Pulse duration 100 fs |
Tourmaline 100 Average power 20mW Wavelength 1040-1064 nm Repetition rate 60-80 MHz Pulse duration 100 fs Output pulse energy 0.25nJ |
Femtosecond Yb-based
seed oscillator |
Tourmaline 300-1 | Femtosecond Yb-based laser system |
Pulse duration 300 fs Average power 1 W |
Tourmaline 300-1 Yb-based laser system Pulse duration 300 fs Average power 1 W Repetition rate 10 kHz Pulse energy 100 mkJ
|
|
Tourmaline Yb- ULRepRate-07 |
Yb-based
high-energy fiber laser development kit, model Tourmaline Yb- ULRepRate-07 |
Wavelength: 1.07 nm ±0.1 nm Pulse duration: 500 fs - 3 ns Pulse energy: up to 10 µJ |
Tourmaline Yb-ULRepRate-07 Yb-based high-energy fiber laser system kit includes: - low-repetition-rate high-energy mode-locked Yb- doped all-fiber laser with open architecture which provides possibility of educational & experimental work for obtaining ultra-low-repetition-rate (up to 10 kHz) and study of parabolic shaped pulses Wavelength: 1.07 nm ±0.1
nm |
Del Mar Photonics, Inc.
4119 Twilight Ridge
San Diego, CA 92130
tel: (858) 876-3133
fax: (858) 630-2376
Skype: delmarphotonics
sales@dmphotonics.com
Femtosecond-multiphoton-ultrafast presentations at Photonics West 2009
Micromachining with Femtosecond Lasers
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Stefan Nolte, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany); Christopher B.
Schaffer, Cornell Univ. (United States)
Femtosecond laser microstructuring of titanium surfaces for
middle ear ossicular replacement prosthesis
Paper 7161C-304 of Conference 7161C
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 9:00 AM – 9:20 AM
Author(s): Justus F. R. Ilgner, Slavomir Biedron, Univ. Hospital Aachen
(Germany); Elena Fadeeva, Boris N. Chichkov, Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V.
(Germany); Martin Westhofen M.D., Univ. Hospital Aachen (Germany)
This study was performed to evaluate the effect of microstructures on titanium
surfaces in contact with adjacent biological tissue. Titanium samples of 5mm
diameter and 0,25mm thickness were structured by means of a Ti:Sapphire
femtosecond laser with lines of parabolic shape (cross-sectional) of 5µm
(parallel), 5µm (cross-hatch) and 10µm width (parallel). The inter-groove
distance between two maxima was exactly twice the line width. Lines smaller than
5µm were not feasible due to the natural irregularity of the basic material with
pits and level changes of up to 2µm.
The process showed little debris and constant microstructure shape over the
whole structured area (2x2mm). Further studies will focus on chondrocyte growth
on microstructured material.
Further progress in the development of the femtosecond-lentotomy
treatment
Paper 7163-34 of Conference 7163
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 9:45 AM
Author(s): Silvia Schumacher, Michael Fromm, Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V.
(Germany); Uwe Oberheide, Laserforum Köln (Germany); Patricia Bock, Ilka
Imbschweiler, Univ. of Veterinary Medicine Hannover (Germany); Heike Hoffmann,
Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V. (Germany); Georg Gerten, Laserforum Köln (Germany);
Andreas Beineke, Univ. of Veterinary Medicine Hannover (Germany); Alfred R.
Wegener, Univ. of Bonn (Germany); Holger Lubatschowski, Laser Zentrum Hannover
e.V. (Germany)
One concept to treat presbyopia based on the Helmholtz theory of accommodation
is the femtosecond-lentotomy. Femtosecond laser pulse induced micro incisions
inside the crystalline lens create gliding planes which increase the flexibility
of the hardened tissue.
Our aim was to evaluate the changes of the crystalline lens due to the
fs-lentotomy treatment and its safety aspects. We used a 100 kHz repetition rate
laser system to create microincisions in crystalline lenses of living rabbit
eyes. The treated in vivo rabbit eyes were analysed using OCT and Scheimpflug
imaging as well as histological sections up to three months postoperatively.
Femtosecond pulse shaping for single molecule measurements
Paper 7185-26 of Conference 7185
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:45 AM – 10:05 AM
Author(s): Fernando D. Stefani, Institut de Ciències Fotòniques (Spain) and
Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München (Germany); Daan Brinks, Niek F. van Hulst,
Institut de Ciències Fotòniques (Spain)
We developed a femtosecond pulse shaping scheme suitable for measurements at the
nanoscale, therefore allowing new experiments on individual nano-systems and
molecules. We demonstrate control over excitation probability of single
molecules by shaping pulses on the femtosecond to picoseconds timescale.
Unprecedented information about the ultrafast dynamics and spectral properties
of the single molecules is obtained.
OCT-aided femtosecond laser micromachining device
Paper 7203-6 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:20 AM
Author(s): Ole Massow, Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V. (Germany); Fabian Will,
Holger Lubatschowski, Rowiak GmbH (Germany)
Due to nonlinear interaction with biological tissue the femtosecond laser
technology can be used for high precision micro machining. The resolution of a
typical Optical Coherence Tomography system lies within the low µm range as well
as the accuracy of the fs laser micro machining system. We demonstrate the setup
and use of a system consisting of a fs-laser and a Fourier Domain OCT using the
same high NA objective for both, cutting and imaging. Examples of in situ OCT
images of the surgery area before and after treatment as well as OCT aided cuts
in various biological tissue will be shown.
Multiphoton fluorescence microscopy using compact
femtosecond fiber laser
Paper 7203-7 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 11:20 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): Cheryl Zhan, Chulmin Joo, Siavash Yazdanfar, GE Global Research
(United States); Mikhail Berezin, Sam Achilefu, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
School of Medicine (United States)
We developed a new MPM imaging system operating in the spectral window around
1550 nm, which features the optimal balance between scattering and absorption,
and minimized the contribution of autofluorescence. This NIR window coincides
with the primary telecommunications window, resulting in a plethora of available
light sources including compact, turnkey femtosecond fiber lasers. The
fluorescence emission is in the NIR wavelengths, which extends the penetration
depth.
We synthesized new carbocyanine NIR fluorescent probes optimized at this
particular window, and measured their two-photon fluorescence intensity and
lifetime with time-correlated single photon counting.
Near-infrared femtosecond laser ablation of
urinary calculi with submicron debris
Paper 7203-8 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 11:40 AM – 12:00 PM
Author(s): Jinze Qiu, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United States); Joel M.
Teichman, The Univ. of British Columbia (Canada); Roman V. Kuranov, Austin B.
McElroy, Volcano Corp. (United States); Tianyi Wang, Amit S. Paranjape, Thomas
E. Milner, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United States)
Light emitted from a near infrared (800nm) femtosecond laser is capable of
plasma induced ablation of various materials. We used a commercially available
hollow core glass fiber to deliver femtosecond pulses and induced ablation on
the surface of human urinary calculi. Femtosecond laser interaction with urinary
calculi was investigated with various pulsed energy levels and number of applied
pulses. Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography was used to image the cross
sections of ablation craters on the surface of urinary calculi.
Femtosecond-laser nano-axotomy lab-on-a-chip for
in-vivo nerve regeneration studies
Paper 7203-9 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 2:00 PM
Author(s): Samuel X. Guo, Frederic G. Bourgeois, The Univ. of Texas at Austin
(United States); Trushal Chokshi, Univ. of Michigan (United States); Nicholas J.
Durr, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United States); Massimo Hilliard, The Univ.
of Queensland (Australia); Nikos Chronis, Univ. of Michigan (United States);
Adela Ben-Yakar, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United States)
A thorough understanding of nerve regeneration in Caenorhabditis elegans
requires performing femtosecond laser nanoaxotomy while minimally affecting the
worm. We present a microfluidic device that fulfills such criteria and can
easily be automated to enable high-throughput genetic and pharmacological
screenings. We performed for the first time in-vivo nanoaxotomy and subsequent
time-lapse imaging of regrowing axons in the absence of anesthetics, with the
same precision and accuracy as previously achieved on agar pad with anesthetics.
We discovered that axonal regeneration occurs much faster than previously
described, and notably, the distal fragment of the severed axon regrows in the
absence of anesthetics.
Probing cilia-driven flow in living embryos using femtosecond
laser ablation and fast imaging
Paper 7203-10 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 2:00 PM – 2:30 PM
Author(s): Willy Supatto, Scott E. Fraser, Julien Vermot, California Institute
of Technology (United States)
We devised an all-optical approach for probing microscopic fluid flows in vivo
compatible with both normal biology and in vivo imaging. Sub-cellular
femtosecond laser ablation deep inside an embryo was used to generate
fluorescent micro-debris seeding the fluid. The seeded flow was subsequently
imaged and quantified using fast confocal imaging and 3D-particle tracking. We
illustrate this approach by investigating the flow generated within the
zebrafish left-right organizer, a micrometer scale ciliated vesicle located deep
inside the embryo and involved in breaking left-right embryonic symmetry. More
generally, this all-optical strategy opens new opportunities for investigating
microscopic flows in living tissues.
The femtosecond laser scalpel for proteomic and
metabolomic mass spectrometry
Paper 7203-11 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 2:30 PM – 2:50 PM
Author(s): Christine L. Kalcic, Tissa C. Gunaratne, Gavin E. Reid, A. Daniel
Jones, Marcos M. Dantus, Michigan State Univ. (United States)
In this presentation we will demonstrate how an amplified Ti:Al2O3 laser can be
used as an excitation source for reproducible photodissociation MS/MS
experiments of peptide cations. In particular, we will show how this approach,
unlike CID, is able to cleave strong chemical bonds while leaving weaker bonds
with high biological relevance intact. We will also present data for which
spectral phase shaping is used to enhance ion activation using an adaptive pulse
shaper. This work takes the first steps towards the realization of the “laser
scalpel” – a tool that will allow mass spectrometrists to interrogate molecular
structures with unprecedented precision using a single instrument.
Ablation of targeted neural processes in the zebrafish hindbrain
using femtosecond laser pulses
Paper 7203-41 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 2:50 PM – 3:20 PM
Author(s): Jennifer Shum, Minoru Koyama, Francesca Minale, Nozomi Nishimura,
Joseph Fetcho, Christopher B. Schaffer, Cornell Univ. (United States)
It remains difficult to study the causal link between neural circuitry and
behavior. A common method is to lesion neurons and observe the behavioral
consequences. However, interpreting effects after removing entire neurons poses
some difficulties; killing a neuron removes a node from a highly interconnected
network, abolishing all information flow into and out of the neuron. A more
precise intervention would be to snip individual neural processes in the neural
circuit, blocking information transmission at specific cut-points without
killing cells.
This can be accomplished using femtosecond laser ablation as an in vivo light
scalpel with submicrometer precision. Femtosecond laser ablation has been used
to cut individual neural processes in the nematode worm, C. elegans. Here, we
use femtosecond laser ablation to cut the lateral or ventral dendrite of the
Mauthner (M) cell in zebrafish larvae, while leaving the cell alive and
surrounding structures intact. The M cell is a neuron that triggers a fast start
escape behavior, causing the fish to swim away from a threatening stimulus with
reaction times of less than 10 ms. The lateral dendrite of this cell is thought
to receive primarily tactile and auditory stimulus input, while the ventral
dendrite receives primarily visual input. By studying changes in this escape
behavior and in the cell electrphysiology in response to tactile and visual
stimuli after cutting the lateral or ventral dendrite, we hope to determine the
mechanisms by which this cell integrates stimulus information and triggers an
escape response.
We determined that cutting the lateral or ventral dendrite of the M cell in 4
day old zebrafish larvae, while leaving the cell alive, is best achieved by
irradiation with one laser pulse at an energy between 50 to 60 nJ, targeted at
about three-quarters of the way along the dendrite, away from the cell body. The
laser pulses were focused with a 0.95NA objective and generated from a
Ti:Sapphire system operating at a 1-kHz repetition-rate with a 100-fs pulse
duration. One pulse at this energy range gave a 50% success rate for cutting the
dendrite, with about 10% showing no cell change and about 40% resulting in cell
death. These fish were then evaluated using behavioral assays that determine the
speed of the fast-start escape behavior in response to tactile stimulus as well
as using whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology to determine changes in
response to both tactile and visual stimuli. Our initial results suggest a more
complex role for the lateral dendrite in this neuronal circuit than that
suggested by the anatomical connectivity.
Femtosecond laser writing of integrated Bragg-grating waveguides
and microfluidic channels for optofluidic sensing
Paper 7203-12 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 8:50 AM
Author(s): Jason R. Grenier, Valeria A. Maselli, Stephen Ho, Shicong Yang, Peter
R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
Femtosecond laser writing was optimized in fused silica to integrate
microfluidic channels and Bragg Grating Waveguides (BGWs) to form 3D optofluidic
sensing microsystems. BGW devices were simultaneously formed in parallel lines
with microfluidic channels to enable strong evanescent field penetration of the
waveguide mode for refractive index characterization of the fluidic medium in
the 1 to 1.442 range. BPM and FDTD waveguide modelling facilitated device design
for enhancing refractive index response at 1550-nm wavelength, while S-bend
waveguides with spectrally narrowed Bragg resonant responses were further
engineered to improved device accuracy. 3D Optofluidic microsystems with
reference gratings for temperature and strain compensation are presented as a
new direction for optical sensing in biochips, chemical reactors, and general
fluidic applications.
High-power multicrystal cw and femtosecond mode-locked
oscillators based on Yb:KYW
Paper 7193-21 of Conference 7193
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 8:50 AM
Author(s): Katrin S. Wentsch, Anne-Laure I. Calendron, Maximilian J. Lederer,
High Q Laser Production GmbH (Austria)
We present results from diode-pumped cw and ultrashort pulse lasers using
multiple bulk Yb:KYW crystals in a resonator optimised for this operation. From
a dual-crystal resonator we obtain nearly 23W of cw-power in a diffraction
limited beam and a maximum power of more than 24W limited by the available pump
power. Mode-locked in the soliton regime using a semiconductor saturable
absorber mirror (SESAM) we obtain more than 14.6W average power with a
pulsewidth of 440fs at a repetition rate of 79MHz whilst the same oscillator
delivered 15.3W in the positive dispersion regime with a similar pulsewidth.
The propagation properties of TW-femtosecond multiple laser
pulses named "Azimuthons" in air
Paper 7200-2 of Conference 7200
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 8:50 AM
Author(s): Xusheng Zhou, Jifeng Zu, Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine
Mechanics (China)
In this paper, we introduced the concept of Optical Vortex (OV) to control the
filament. The propagation properties of a TW femtosecond laser multi pulses
named “Azimuthons” are numerically demonstrated via the (2D+1) model for the
first time. By changing some factors of the pulses, such as the distance and
phase difference among the pulses, etc., the distances and stability of the
propagation of the pulses in air are discussed. By using some kinds of
step-phase plates (SPPs) to segement spatially the phase of the input laser
pulse, the pulse behaving like a vortex is found, and at last, some comparisons
between the single pulse with the SPP and the “Azimuthons” are also given.
Nanostructure formation processes in femtosecond laser ablation
of thin film surfaces
Paper 7201-1 of Conference 7201
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:40 AM – 9:20 AM
Author(s): Godai Miyaji, Kenzo Miyazaki, Kyoto Univ. (Japan)
We have studied the origin of periodic nanostructure formation on thin film
surfaces in femtosecond laser ablation at low fluence. Using diamondlike carbon
films patterned with submicrometer-size stripes, we have observed that the
nanoscale ablation is preferentially initiated by a local electric field
enhanced on the stripe surface with high curvature. The experimental results for
the initial stage of nanostructuring show that the nanoscale ablation can be
developed with the periodic enhancement of local fields through the excitation
of surface plasmon polaritons in the surface layer. The estimated field
periodicity is in good agreement with the observed size of nanostructures.
Femtosecond laser direct written diffractive optical elements and
their integration in oxide glass
Paper 7203-13 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:50 AM – 9:10 AM
Author(s): Jiyeon Choi, Martin C. Richardson, College of Optics &
Photonics/Univ. of Central Florida (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Femtosecond laser direct writing is a unique technique to produce volumetric
structural modification with high spatial resolution in a transparent medium.
Hence it is suitable to generate not only periodical structures but also
non-periodically distributed refractive index change in glass such as volumetric
Diffractive Optical Elements (DOEs). We investigate the fabrication and
characterization of photo-written Fresnel Zone Plates (FZPs) by using various
femtosecond lasers. Diffraction Efficiency (DE) is investigated as functions of
laser and writing parameters. Integration of more than two FZPs to improve
diffraction efficiency and to modify beam distribution is described as well.
Integrating optics and micro-fluidic channels using femtosecond laser
irradiation
Paper 7203-15 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 10:00 AM
Author(s): Troy P. Anderson, M. Ramme, College of Optics & Photonics/Univ. of
Central Florida (United States); Nathan Carlie, Clemson Univ. (United States);
Jiyeon Choi, C. Faris, College of Optics & Photonics/Univ. of Central Florida
(United States); Laeticia C. Petit, Kathleen Richardson, Clemson Univ. (United
States); Martin C. Richardson, College of Optics & Photonics/Univ. of Central
Florida (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The ability to integrate micro-channels for fluid transport with optical
elements is attractive for the development of compact and portable chip-based
sensors. Femtosecond Laser Direct Writing (FLDW) in transparent materials is a
powerful fabrication technique for the fabrication of such integrated devices.
We demonstrate the use of FLDW to fabricate coupled micro-fluidic channels and
optical waveguides towards an integrated sensing device for molecular detection.
Waveguides were directly written into the host material and channels were formed
by modifying the molecular structure through FLDW followed by wet chemical
etching. Multiple host materials including Chalcogenide glasses for IR detection
are discussed.
Femtosecond laser written chirped fiber Bragg gratings
Paper 7203-18 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:10 AM – 11:30 AM
Author(s): Christian Voigtländer, Jens U. Thomas, Elodie Wikszak, Stefan Nolte,
Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany); Andreas Tünnermann, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ.
Jena (Germany) and Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision
Engineering (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) are key components in optical communication systems.
In recent years they have also become important as cavity mirrors for laser
systems. Chirped fiber Bragg gratings (CFBGs) are attractive for dispersion
control and compensation.
Here we report on two different approaches to inscribe CFBGs in non
photosensitive fibers by femtosecond laser pulses like bending the fiber in the
interference pattern of a periodic phase mask. Another approach is based on a
polymer phase mask with a high thermal expansion coefficient in order to tune
the period by changing the temperature.
High-strength fused-silica flexures manufactured by femtosecond laser
Paper 7203-19 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:30 AM – 11:50 AM
Author(s): Yves Bellouard, Eindhoven Univ. of Technology (Netherlands); Ali A.
Said, Mark A. Dugan, Philippe Bado, Translume, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Flexures are mechanical elements used in micro- and precision-engineering to
precisely guide the motion of micro-parts. They consist of slender bodies that
deform elastically upon the application of a force. Although counter-intuitive
at first, fused silica is an attractive material for flexure. We report on
high-aspect ratio fused silica flexures manufactured by femtosecond laser
combined with chemical etching.
The manufactured elements show outstanding mechanical properties with flexural
strengths largely exceeding those obtained with other technologies and
materials. Fused silica flexures offer a mean to combine integrated optics with
micro-mechanics in a single monolithic substrate.
Density modulation of transparent polymers by irradiation of femtosecond laser
Paper 7203-20 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:50 AM – 12:10 PM
Author(s): Hiroyuki Mochizuki, Wataru Watanabe, National Institute of Advanced
Industrial Science and Technology (Japan); Yasuyuki Ozeki, Kazuyoshi Itoh, Osaka
Univ. (Japan); Katsumi Matsuda, Satoshi Hirono, Omron Corp. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Bragg-type gratings were prepared by femtosecond laser irradiation in a series
of optical polymers. The diffraction efficiency of polymethylpentene (PMP) was
an order of magnitude higher than those of other polymers. Repeated scanning
irradiation with femtosecond laser light formed gratings by refractive index
changes inside the polymers. In PMP, whose density was the lowest among the
polymers examined, large volume contraction by femtosecond laser irradiation was
observed with TEM. The larger refractive index change of PMP was attributed to
its large volume contraction based on its low density.
Femtosecond-laser surface structuring of biocompatible metals
Paper 7203-21 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:40 PM – 2:00 PM
Author(s): Anatoliy Y. Vorobyev, Chunlei Guo, Univ. of Rochester (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We perform femtosecond laser surface structuring of a number of metals for
biomedical applications. The effects of laser fluence and the number of applied
pulses on laser-induced surface topography are studied using scanning electron
microscopy. We find that the femtosecond laser produces a large variety of nano-,
micro-, and periodic-structures. Our results suggest that femtosecond laser
treatment of metals produces a richer variety of surface structures that are
beneficial for biomedical applications than long-pulse laser treatments.
Monitoring of microplasma formation and filamentation of tightly focused
femtosecond laser pulses in dielectrics
Paper 7214-27 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:48 PM – 2:16 PM
Author(s): Saulius Juodkazis, Vygantas Mizeikis, Hokkaido Univ. (Japan); Hiroaki
Misawa, Hokkiado Univ. (Japan); Sergey I. Kudryashov, Vladimir D. Zvorykin,
Andrei A. Ionin, P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute (Russian Federation)
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We report acoustic characterization of phenomena accompanying optical damage in
solid dielectric crystals and glasses by tightly focused femtosecond laser
pulses. Generation of the free-carrier plasma and filamentation of the laser
pulse These phenomena are omnipresent in femtosecond laser microfabrication,
which becomes increasingly popular tool for micro- and nano-structuring of
optically transparent dielectrics. In our studies, contact acoustic monitoring
technique was employed to perform spatially-resolved in situ detection of
micro-plasma formation and filamentation of focused femtosecond laser pulses
with supercritical powers in bulk dielectrics.
Soft x-ray source for nanostructure imaging using femtosecond-laser-irradiated
clusters
Paper 7214-28 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:16 PM – 2:44 PM
Author(s): Yuji Fukuda, Japan Atomic Energy Agency (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The intense soft x-ray light source using the supersonic expansion of the mixed
gas of helium and carbon dioxide,
when irradiated by a femtosecond Ti:sapphire laser pulse, is observed to enhance
the radiation of soft x-rays from the carbon dioxide clusters. Using this soft
x-ray emissions, nanostructure images of 100-nm-thick Mo foils in a wide field
of view (square millimeter scale) with high spatial resolution (800 nm) are
obtained with high dynamic range LiF crystal detectors. The local
inhomogeneities of soft x-ray absorption by the nanometer-thick foils is
measured with an accuracy of less than 3 %.
High performance multi-modal CARS microscopy using a single femtosecond source
Paper 7183-35 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:20 PM – 2:35 PM
Author(s): Adrian F. Pegoraro, National Research Council Canada (Canada) and
Queen's Univ. (Canada); Andrew Ridsdale, Douglas J. Moffatt, John P. Pezacki,
National Research Council Canada (Canada); Albert Stolow, National Research
Council Canada (Canada) and Queen's Univ. (Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We demonstrate high performance CARS microscopy using a simple fs Ti:Sapphire
laser source combined with a photonic crystal fiber. Using optimally chirped fs
pump and Stokes laser pulses, we achieve high quality multi-modal imaging
(simultaneous CARS, two-photon fluorescence, and second harmonic generation) of
live cells and tissues. Chirp as a control parameter permits simultaneous
optimization of the spectral resolution and signal levels of these imaging
modalities. We will show applications of our multi-modal CARS imaging technique
to biomedical problems and discuss the optimization of these various
microscopies for particular problems.
Ultrafast imaging of plasmas produced in conditions of femtosecond waveguide
writing in dielectrics
Paper 7203-23 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:20 PM – 2:40 PM
Author(s): Wojciech Gawelda, Daniel Puerto Garcia, Jan Siegel, Alejandro Ruiz de
la Cruz, Andrés Ferrer Moreu, Marcial Galván Sosa, Francisco Javier Solís
Céspedes, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (Spain)
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The filament by phase segmentation spatially for femtosecond laser pulses in air
Paper 7200-14 of Conference 7200
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Xusheng Zhou, Jifeng Zu, Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine
Mechanics (China)
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We numerically investigated multiple filamentation of a TW femtosecond laser
pulse by phase segmentation spatially. Specific devices for this function could
be random phase plates (RPPs) and step phase plates (SPPs), so the shapes of
several cells for the phase segmentation spatially are designed. The simulation
of the propagation of the laser pulses is realized via a reduced (2D+1) model.
We found that the phase segmentation make the filaments split fast due to the
un-absorptive boundary condition. The pulse could gain one-magnitude higher peak
intensities than an identical free-propagation pulse. Also we noticed that there
is the energy flow in the case of the SPP for the first time.
Two-beam interferometric inscription of UV-femtosecond fiber-Bragg gratings
Paper 7195-12 of Conference 7195
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Eric Lindner, Martin Becker, Sven Brückner, Joachim Bergmann, Manfred
W. Rothhardt, Hartmut Bartelt, Institute of Photonic Technology (Germany)
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The inscription of fiber Bragg gratings with femtosecond laser radiation gives
access to a wide range of new materials. The use of UV femtosecond laser
radiation would give direct access to one-photon absorption in doped silica
materials and could achieve gratings with high spatial resolution. Besides the
choice of the inscription laser wavelength, also the inscription method is of
importance. We have therefore investigated the use of an interferometric
technique in combination with UV femtosecond laser pulses. The laser coherence
has been considered and the wavelength tuning and reflection properties have
been tested for several different types of fibers.
High-energy and high-power Yb:KGW femtosecond regenerative amplifier
Paper 7203-27 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Taisuke Miura, Shinji Ito, OMRON Laserfront Inc. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We are developing directly diode-pumped femtosecond lasers for industrial
applications.
A mode-locked Yb:KYW laser with the pulse duration of 130fs has been developed
as a seed laser. The Yb:KGW crystal in the regenerative amplifier is pumped by a
75-W fiber-coupled laser diode.
The 4-nJ seed pulse was amplified to 0.82mJ at the repetition rate of 1kHz. At
the repetition rate of 100kHz, the averaged output achieved more than 3W after
the pulse compression. Furthermore, the amplified pulse was compressed to nearly
Fourier transform limit. The calculated transform limited pulse width and the
measured pulse width was 319fs and 339fs, respectively.
Femtosecond fiber laser system for medical applications
Paper 7203-29 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:50 PM – 5:10 PM
Author(s): Clemens Hönninger, JT Optical Engine GmbH & Co. KG (Germany); Marco
Plötner, Bülend Ortac, Roland Ackermann, Robert Kammel, Jens Limpert, Stefan
Nolte, Andreas Tünnermann, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany)
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We report on the realization of a femtosecond fiber laser system delivering
5-µJ, sub-400-fs pulses at pulse repetition rates higher than 200 kHz. The
system is monolithically integrated from the oscillator to the last booster
amplifier stage. The 25 MHz pulse train of the oscillator is temporally
stretched in a fiber-based stretcher, down-counted to the desired pulse
repetition rate by using a fiber-coupled acousto-optic modulator, and amplified
by a pre-amplifier stage followed by a large mode area booster amplifier. A
temporal pulse compression takes place in a grating-based bulk compressor. The
system was applied for the treatment of presbyopia.
Atmospheric pressure femtosecond laser imaging mass spectrometry
Paper 7182-68 of Conference 7182
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM
Author(s): Yves Coello, Tissa C. Gunaratne, Marcos M. Dantus, Michigan State
Univ. (United States)
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We present a novel atmospheric pressure femtosecond laser imaging mass
spectrometry system able to ionize and fragment molecules regardless of their
size via direct multiphoton excitation, without the need for a sample matrix.
Our uses amplified femtosecond laser pulses and is able to deliver
transform-limited (TL) 30fs focused pulses to the sample thanks to a multiphoton
intrapulse interference phase scan (MIIPS) pulse shaper that characterizes and
corrects the spectral phase distortions of the pulses, ensuring efficient and
reproducible ionization within the focal volume. Various samples including
biological tissue have been imaged with 10 um resolution using this approach.
Femtosecond laser surgery on the anterior segment of the eye: laser parameters
and tissue optics
Paper 7163-67 of Conference 7163
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM
Author(s): Karsten Plamann, Valeria Nuzzo, Florent Deloison, Donald A. Peyrot,
Florent Aptel, Caroline Crotti, Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Techniques
Avancées (France); Laurent Arnaud, Benoît C. Forget, René Descartes Univ.
(France); Michèle Savoldelli, Jean-Marc Legeais, Hôpital Hôtel Dieu (France)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Both corneal transplant and glaucoma surgery by femtosecond lasers have to
overcome the difficulty of maintaining a good beam quality while focussing into
strongly scattering tissue. Our objective is to elucidate the optimal beam
parameters and to provide optimised laser devices. We will present surgical
experiments as well as total and direct transmission spectra on tissues of the
anterior segment. The results will be compared to a microstructural analysis of
the tissues and a mathematical study of the long and short range order within
these tissues, combined with calculations linking the macroscopic optical
properties to the tissular microstructure.
Nonequilibrium/metastable high-pressure phase quenching of condensed matters
using femtosecond laser-driven shock compression
Paper 7203-17 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 8:30 AM
Author(s): Tomokazu Sano, Akio Hirose, Osaka Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Strong shock wave is driven during femtosecond laser ablation of condensed
matters as a recoil pressure, and propagates into the material. Rising the
pressure and the temperature in the shock wave, the material transforms to its
high-pressure phase. The high-pressure phase once induced remains in the solid
as a nonequilibrium/metastable material after the pressure release depending on
the materials and conditions. We have quenched some high-pressure phases of
solid materials such as iron, carbon, and titanium using femtosecond
laser-driven shock wave. We will introduce the properties of the femtosecond
laser-driven shock wave, experimental results, and thermodynamic estimation of
states such as the pressure and the temperature in the shock wave in the talk.
Nonequilibrium/metastable high-pressure phase quenching of condensed matters
using femtosecond laser-driven shock compression
Paper 7201-17 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 8:30 AM
Author(s): Tomokazu Sano, Akio Hirose, Osaka Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Strong shock wave is driven during femtosecond laser ablation of condensed
matters as a recoil pressure, and propagates into the material. Rising the
pressure and the temperature in the shock wave, the material transforms to its
high-pressure phase. The high-pressure phase once induced remains in the solid
as a nonequilibrium/metastable material after the pressure release depending on
the materials and conditions. We have quenched some high-pressure phases of
solid materials such as iron, carbon, and titanium using femtosecond
laser-driven shock wave. We will introduce the properties of the femtosecond
laser-driven shock wave, experimental results, and thermodynamic estimation of
states such as the pressure and the temperature in the shock wave in the talk.
Dynamics of femtosecond laser-induced breakdowns in water
Paper 7203-19 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:50 AM – 9:10 AM
Author(s): Akihiro Takita, Yoshio Hayasaki, Utsunomiya Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
To investigate dynamics of laser-induced phenomena on parallel femtosecond laser
processing is important for fast and precise processing. A pump-probe
interference microscope was used to measure time variations of intensity and
phase distribution of water around laser focus. When two femtosecond laser
pulses were irradiated simultaneously, an addition of shock waves and reflection
of a shock wave at a center bubble were observed. Refractive index variation of
overlapping shock waves became twice as high as that of a single shock wave.
Dynamics of femtosecond laser-induced breakdowns in water
Paper 7201-19 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:50 AM – 9:10 AM
Author(s): Akihiro Takita, Yoshio Hayasaki, Utsunomiya Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
To investigate dynamics of laser-induced phenomena on parallel femtosecond laser
processing is important for fast and precise processing. A pump-probe
interference microscope was used to measure time variations of intensity and
phase distribution of water around laser focus. When two femtosecond laser
pulses were irradiated simultaneously, an addition of shock waves and reflection
of a shock wave at a center bubble were observed. Refractive index variation of
overlapping shock waves became twice as high as that of a single shock wave.
Femtosecond laser doping of silicon beyond the solubility limit
Paper 7203-20 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:10 AM – 9:30 AM
Author(s): Mark T. Winkler, Meng-Ju Sher, Eric D. Mazur, Harvard Univ. (United
States)
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Using femtosecond laser irradiation, we dope silicon with sulfur to ~1% atomic;
a level beyond the equilibrium solubility limit by several orders of magnitude.
This nonequilibrium phase of silicon exhibits many intriguing optical
properties, such as near-unity absorbtance over a broad wavelength range (250 -
2500 nm). Remarkable optoelectronic devices have already been fabricated using
this laser-doping technique, such as photodetectors exhibiting large
photoconductive gain as well as infrared response at wavelengths as long as
1500nm. We believe additional devices are possible, such as a silicon-based
solar cell that absorbs the infrared portion of the solar spectrum, where almost
30% of the sun's energy resides, and which passes directly through conventional
silicon cells.
Femtosecond laser doping of silicon beyond the solubility limit
Paper 7201-20 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:10 AM – 9:30 AM
Author(s): Mark T. Winkler, Meng-Ju Sher, Eric D. Mazur, Harvard Univ. (United
States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Using femtosecond laser irradiation, we dope silicon with sulfur to ~1% atomic;
a level beyond the equilibrium solubility limit by several orders of magnitude.
This nonequilibrium phase of silicon exhibits many intriguing optical
properties, such as near-unity absorbtance over a broad wavelength range (250 -
2500 nm). Remarkable optoelectronic devices have already been fabricated using
this laser-doping technique, such as photodetectors exhibiting large
photoconductive gain as well as infrared response at wavelengths as long as
1500nm. We believe additional devices are possible, such as a silicon-based
solar cell that absorbs the infrared portion of the solar spectrum, where almost
30% of the sun's energy resides, and which passes directly through conventional
silicon cells.
Linear micromirror array for broadband femtosecond pulse shaping in phase and
amplitude
Paper 7208-3 of Conference 7208
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:20 AM – 9:40 AM
Author(s): Stefan M. Weber, Univ. de Genève (Switzerland); Severin Waldis,
Wilfried Noell, Univ. de Neuchâtel (Switzerland); Denis Kiselev, Jérôme
Extermann, Luigi Bonacina, Jean-Pierre Wolf, Univ. de Genève (Switzerland);
Nicolaas F. de Rooij, Univ. de Neuchâtel (Switzerland)
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We are developing an SOI-based MEMS micromirror array designed for optical,
femtosecond laser pulse shaping applications. It is a bulk-micromachined device,
allowing to retard or diminish certain laser frequencies in order to perform
phase and amplitude modulation within a frequency band spanning the UV to the
near-infrared. The individual mirrors are fixed on either side by springs with
two degrees of freedom: out-of-plane motion for phase shift and rotational
motion for binary amplitude modulation, realized using independent sets of
vertical comb drives. The first applications will include femtosecond
discrimination experiments on biomolecules.
Nano-hemi-shell arrays produced by femtosecond laser microprocessing for SERS
applications
Paper 7203-21 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 9:50 AM
Author(s): Tetsuo Sakai, Keio Univ. (Japan); Eric D. Diebold, Kevin Vora,
Harvard Univ. (United States); Yuji Nishizawa, Henry Nugroho, Minoru Obara, Keio
Univ. (Japan); Eric D. Mazur, Harvard Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Nano-scale periodic structures produce a greatly enhanced near-field at the
surface and therefore they are very promising for applications involving Surface
Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS). The ideal shape of the structure is a sphere,
a rod, a needle or a hemi-shell. Nano hemi-shell structures obtained by
evaporating a thin metal film on small dielectric particles, in particular, have
attracted much attention. We fabricate isolated, clusters of two or three
particles and hexagonally-arranged nano hemi-shells on a glass substrate. We
perform Raman spectroscopy to investigate the optical properties of 2D nano
hemi-shell arrays composed of small polystyrene particles coated with gold and
measure the electric field distribution around the structure using femtosecond
laser pulses.
Nano-hemi-shell arrays produced by femtosecond laser microprocessing for SERS
applications
Paper 7201-21 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 9:50 AM
Author(s): Tetsuo Sakai, Keio Univ. (Japan); Eric D. Diebold, Kevin Vora,
Harvard Univ. (United States); Yuji Nishizawa, Henry Nugroho, Minoru Obara, Keio
Univ. (Japan); Eric D. Mazur, Harvard Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Nano-scale periodic structures produce a greatly enhanced near-field at the
surface and therefore they are very promising for applications involving Surface
Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS). The ideal shape of the structure is a sphere,
a rod, a needle or a hemi-shell. Nano hemi-shell structures obtained by
evaporating a thin metal film on small dielectric particles, in particular, have
attracted much attention. We fabricate isolated, clusters of two or three
particles and hexagonally-arranged nano hemi-shells on a glass substrate. We
perform Raman spectroscopy to investigate the optical properties of 2D nano
hemi-shell arrays composed of small polystyrene particles coated with gold and
measure the electric field distribution around the structure using femtosecond
laser pulses.
Near-field nanostructure processing with femtosecond laser excitation: metallic
versus dielectric particle
Paper 7203-22 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:50 AM – 10:10 AM
Author(s): Yuto Tanaka, Yuji Nishizawa, Tomoya Miyanishi, Keio Univ. (Japan);
Nikolay N. Nedyalkov, Petar A. Atanasov, Keio Univ. (Japan) and Bulgarian
Academy of Sciences (Bulgaria); Minoru Obara, Keio Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
In this paper we present experimental and theoretical results on the processing
properties by the optical near field induced by gold nanoparticles and
transparent dielectric particles excited by ultrashort laser pulse. We will
compare nano-plasmonic processing with dielectric near-field processing.
Near-field nanostructure processing with femtosecond laser excitation: metallic
versus dielectric particle
Paper 7201-22 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:50 AM – 10:10 AM
Author(s): Yuto Tanaka, Yuji Nishizawa, Tomoya Miyanishi, Keio Univ. (Japan);
Nikolay N. Nedyalkov, Petar A. Atanasov, Keio Univ. (Japan) and Bulgarian
Academy of Sciences (Bulgaria); Minoru Obara, Keio Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
In this paper we present experimental and theoretical results on the processing
properties by the optical near field induced by gold nanoparticles and
transparent dielectric particles excited by ultrashort laser pulse. We will
compare nano-plasmonic processing with dielectric near-field processing.
Discrete optics in femtosecond-laser written waveguide arrays
Paper 7203-23 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:40 AM – 11:10 AM
Author(s): Alexander Szameit, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
During the last years, a variety of concepts for imaging, all-optical routing
and switching were presented, utilizing the so-called “discrete optical” light
propagation in integrated optical waveguides. As a very promising approach for
the realization of the required truly three-dimensional devices, the femtosecond
waveguide direct-writing technique experiences growing interest. Such
laser-written structures provide many prospects not only for sophisticated
applications, but also for fundamental research. In particular the possibility
to variably create precise arrays of waveguides allows for the experimental
investigation of many discrete optical phenomena based on evanescent coupling
between the individual lattice sites, which will be reviewed in this
presentation.
Discrete optics in femtosecond-laser written waveguide arrays
Paper 7201-23 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:40 AM – 11:10 AM
Author(s): Alexander Szameit, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
During the last years, a variety of concepts for imaging, all-optical routing
and switching were presented, utilizing the so-called “discrete optical” light
propagation in integrated optical waveguides. As a very promising approach for
the realization of the required truly three-dimensional devices, the femtosecond
waveguide direct-writing technique experiences growing interest. Such
laser-written structures provide many prospects not only for sophisticated
applications, but also for fundamental research. In particular the possibility
to variably create precise arrays of waveguides allows for the experimental
investigation of many discrete optical phenomena based on evanescent coupling
between the individual lattice sites, which will be reviewed in this
presentation.
Volumetric photonic structures fabricated with femtosecond lasers
Paper 7203-24 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:10 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): Timothy Gerke, Rafael Piestun, Univ. of Colorado at Boulder (United
States)
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Ultrashort pulse lasers enable the fabrication of volumetric arrangements within
homogeneous and heterogeneous dielectric materials. We report on the design and
fabrication of novel functional structures that include computer-generated
volume holograms and aperiodic photonic crystals.
Volumetric photonic structures fabricated with femtosecond lasers
Paper 7201-24 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:10 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): Timothy Gerke, Rafael Piestun, Univ. of Colorado at Boulder (United
States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Ultrashort pulse lasers enable the fabrication of volumetric arrangements within
homogeneous and heterogeneous dielectric materials. We report on the design and
fabrication of novel functional structures that include computer-generated
volume holograms and aperiodic photonic crystals.
Investigating new sources of femtosecond fiber lasers in multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-56 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:15 AM – 11:30 AM
Author(s): Shuo Tang, Univ. of British Columbia (Canada) and Univ. of
California, Irvine (United States); Jian Liu, PolarOnyx, Inc. (United States);
Zhongping Chen, Bruce J. Tromberg, Univ. of California, Irvine (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Femtosecond fiber lasers have emerged as a promising light source for MPM
applications. The laser system is reliable, compact, low-cost, and portable
because it uses mostly fiber connected components from telecommunications. We
have implemented compact, all-fiber based femtosecond fiber lasers in
multiphoton imaging at the wavelength bands of 1030 nm and 1560 nm. Intrinsic
second-harmonic generation signal is excited from rat tail tendon and human skin
samples. Two-photon excited fluorescence images are obtained from tissues
stained with exogenous fluorophores. Our results show that the femtosecond fiber
lasers have the great potential of applications in developing all-fiber based,
portable multiphoton endoscopes.
Memory effects in femtosecond collective spin rotation in ferromagnetic
semiconductors
Paper 7214-37 of Conference 7214
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:28 AM – 11:56 AM
Author(s): Jigang Wang, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (United States)
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We present a femtosecond response in photoinduced collective magnetization
rotation in the ferromagnetic
semiconductor GaMnAs, which allows for detection of a four-state magnetic memory
at the femtosecond
time scale. The temporal profile of this cooperative magnetization rotation
exhibits a
discontinuity that reveals two distinct temporal regimes, marked by the
transition from a highly
non-equilibrium, carrier-mediated regime within the first 200 fs, to a thermal,
lattice-heating picosecond
regime
Toward femtosecond laser micromachined opto-fluidic devices for detection and
identification of algae
Paper 7201-34 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:10 PM – 2:40 PM
Author(s): Yves Bellouard, Vijay K. Pahilwani, Eindhoven Univ. of Technology
(Netherlands); Thomas Rohrlack, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (Norway);
Ali A. Said, Mark A. Dugan, Philippe Bado, Translume, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We explore the prospects of a miniaturized fluid channel with an integrated
waveguide as a rudimentary but compact tool for beads and biological cell
(algae) detection, counting and to a certain extent, identification.
A curved optical waveguide is used to illuminate particles flowing inside a
fluidic channel. The changes in the transmitted signal are monitored using a
four-quadrant photo-detector. The relative quadrant signals give rise to
distinct wavelets which can be processed to distinguish different families of
cells. In addition, simple information like flow direction can be stated.
The channel and waveguide are fabricated out of a monolithic fused-silica
substrate using femtosecond laser writing process combined with chemical
etching.
This chip is a robust proof-of-concept and paves the way for a more elaborate
femtosecond laser-based analytical opto-fluidic device having a network of
waveguides which would for fluorescence or metrology.
Toward femtosecond laser micromachined opto-fluidic devices for detection and
identification of algae
Paper 7203-34 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:10 PM – 2:40 PM
Author(s): Yves Bellouard, Vijay K. Pahilwani, Eindhoven Univ. of Technology
(Netherlands); Thomas Rohrlack, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (Norway);
Ali A. Said, Mark A. Dugan, Philippe Bado, Translume, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We explore the prospects of a miniaturized fluid channel with an integrated
waveguide as a rudimentary but compact tool for beads and biological cell
(algae) detection, counting and to a certain extent, identification.
A curved optical waveguide is used to illuminate particles flowing inside a
fluidic channel. The changes in the transmitted signal are monitored using a
four-quadrant photo-detector. The relative quadrant signals give rise to
distinct wavelets which can be processed to distinguish different families of
cells. In addition, simple information like flow direction can be stated.
The channel and waveguide are fabricated out of a monolithic fused-silica
substrate using femtosecond laser writing process combined with chemical
etching.
This chip is a robust proof-of-concept and paves the way for a more elaborate
femtosecond laser-based analytical opto-fluidic device having a network of
waveguides which would for fluorescence or metrology.
Wavelength dependence of nanosecond and femtosecond optical breakdown in water
Paper 7175-36 of Conference 7175
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 3:30 PM – 4:00 PM
Author(s): Norbert Linz, Sebastian Freidank, Univ. zu Lübeck (Germany); Hannes
Vogelmann, Thomas Trickl, Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe (Germany); Cord L. Arnold,
Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V. (Germany); Alfred Vogel, Univ. zu Lübeck (Germany)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Local force detection of femtosecond laser-induced stress wave using atomic
force microscope
Paper 7201-37 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 3:50 PM – 4:10 PM
Author(s): Yoichiroh Hosokawa, Nara Institute of Science and Technology (Japan);
Kazunori Okano, Nara Institute of Science and Technology (Japan) and Tohoku
Fukushi Univ. (Japan); Hiroshi M. Masuhara, Nara Institute of Science and
Technology (Japan) and National Chiao Tung Univ. (Taiwan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
When an intense femtosecond laser is focused on the cell culture medium, an
impulsive stress wave is induced by the propagation of the shockwave and
generation and collapse of the cavitation bubble. We have applied the impulsive
force to individual separation and transportation of animal cell which adheres
on extra cellular matrix. In this work, the time and spatial evaluation of the
impulsive force was investigated by using atomic force microscope and considered
with results of high-speed imaging.
Local force detection of femtosecond laser-induced stress wave using atomic
force microscope
Paper 7203-37 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 3:50 PM – 4:10 PM
Author(s): Yoichiroh Hosokawa, Nara Institute of Science and Technology (Japan);
Kazunori Okano, Nara Institute of Science and Technology (Japan) and Tohoku
Fukushi Univ. (Japan); Hiroshi M. Masuhara, Nara Institute of Science and
Technology (Japan) and National Chiao Tung Univ. (Taiwan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
When an intense femtosecond laser is focused on the cell culture medium, an
impulsive stress wave is induced by the propagation of the shockwave and
generation and collapse of the cavitation bubble. We have applied the impulsive
force to individual separation and transportation of animal cell which adheres
on extra cellular matrix. In this work, the time and spatial evaluation of the
impulsive force was investigated by using atomic force microscope and considered
with results of high-speed imaging.
Ultrasound characterization of cavitation microbubbles produced by femtosecond
laser pulses
Paper 7175-38 of Conference 7175
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:00 PM – 4:20 PM
Author(s): Andrei B. Karpiouk, Salavat R. Aglyamov, Frederic G. Bourgeois, Adela
Ben-Yakar, Stanislav Y. Emelianov, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The ultrasound-based technique to monitor cavitation microbubbles induced by
nanosecond laser was evaluated to characterize the microbubbles produced in
water by a 100-fs single laser pulses with energies of 40-200 nJ and a
wavelength of 780 nm using an 63x-objective with NA of 1.4. Temporal
characteristics of passive acoustic emission and pulse/echo probing detected by
a 48 MHz single-element ultrasound transducer with fractional bandwidth of 60%,
an f-number of 1.4, and a focal distance of 5.5 mm were used to assess the
microbubble location and size. The results agreed with theoretical predictions
indicating the ultrasound technique's applicability to quantitatively assess 10
to 30-micrometers microbubbles.
Optical coherence microscopy for nondestructive 3D imaging of femtosecond laser
written structures
Paper 7201-39 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:30 PM – 4:50 PM
Author(s): Jiyeon Choi, Kye-Sung Lee, Supraja Murali, Troy P. Anderson, Jannick
P. Rolland, Martin C. Richardson, College of Optics & Photonics/Univ. of Central
Florida (United States)
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Optical Coherence Microscopy (OCM) has become a powerful nondestructive 3D
imaging technique for its high lateral and depth resolution. We investigate the
feasibility of a use of OCM as a diagnostic tool for femtosecond laser direct
writing to evaluate the quality of photo-induced volumetric structures produced
within a transparent substrate. 3D structures of either refractive index change
or optical breakdown were formed with the size from 10 to 100 m in a fused
silica. 3D images of photo-written structures were obtained with high S/N ratio
since the substrate has transparent window at both writing and probe laser
wavelength.
Optical coherence microscopy for nondestructive 3D imaging of femtosecond laser
written structures
Paper 7203-39 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:30 PM – 4:50 PM
Author(s): Jiyeon Choi, Kye-Sung Lee, Supraja Murali, Troy P. Anderson, Jannick
P. Rolland, Martin C. Richardson, College of Optics & Photonics/Univ. of Central
Florida (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Optical Coherence Microscopy (OCM) has become a powerful nondestructive 3D
imaging technique for its high lateral and depth resolution. We investigate the
feasibility of a use of OCM as a diagnostic tool for femtosecond laser direct
writing to evaluate the quality of photo-induced volumetric structures produced
within a transparent substrate. 3D structures of either refractive index change
or optical breakdown were formed with the size from 10 to 100 m in a fused
silica. 3D images of photo-written structures were obtained with high S/N ratio
since the substrate has transparent window at both writing and probe laser
wavelength.
High-power, low-noise, all-fiber, femtosecond supercontinuum source
Paper 7195-35 of Conference 7195
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 5:20 PM – 5:40 PM
Author(s): Jeffrey W. Nicholson, Jayesh C. Jasapara, Keisuke Tominaga, Clifford
Headley III, OFS Labs. (United States)
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We present an all-fiber femtosecond supercontinuum with average power greater
than 2 W. While the power is significantly higher than traditional femtosecond
erbium-fiber based supercontinuum sources, the relative intensity noise is
substantially lower than a continuous-wave supercontinuum with comparable
average power.
A novel metal separation membrane by femtosecond laser microprocessing
Paper 7204-30 of Conference 7204
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Xichen M. Yang, Gang Wang, Jianbo Lei, Tianjin Polytechnic Univ.
(China)
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The separation and filtration membrane is widely used in bio-medicine,
purification of water and foodstuff industry. However, conventional membrane
made from polymer, sintered metal and ceramic materials have some disadvantages:
tortuous holes, smaller permeate flux and short using life. A novel metal
membrane by fs laser microprocessing is presented to compete with conventional
membrane. Three metal film of stainless, Al and Cu with 10~25μm are used as
novel membrane materials. Laser microprocessing parameters have been optimized.
It is shown that stainless film of 25μm thickness is the best membrane
materials, its permeate flux has been increased by 6 times.
Ablation of aluminum-nitride films by nanosecond and femtosecond laser pulses
Paper 7201-46 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Vitaly E. Gruzdev, Robert D. Tzou, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia
(United States); Ildar Salakhutdinov, Yuriy Danylyuk, Gregory W. Auner, Erik
McCullen, Wayne State Univ. (United States)
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We present results of study of laser-induced ablation of AlN films with variable
content of oxygen. The ablation was done by single nanosecond pulse at
wavelength 248 nm, and by single femtosecond pulse at wavelength 775 nm in air
at normal pressure. Ablation craters were inspected by Raman spectrometer, AFM,
SEM, and Nomarski microscope. Chemical modification of material by nanosecond
pulses around the ablation craters was detected for all samples with total
absence of thermo-mechanical fracturing near the crater edges. The femtosecond
pulses produced very gentle ablation with no signs of thermal or
thermo-mechanical effects. We discuss mechanisms responsible for the observed
effects.
Chirped-pulse long cavity femtosecond Cr:forsterite oscillator
Paper 7193-98 of Conference 7193
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Vladislav I. Shcheslavskiy, Denis A. Ivanov, Theo Lasser, Ecole
Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland); Alexander N. Vasil'ev, Alexey
M. Zheltikov, Lomonosov Moscow State Univ. (Russian Federation)
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Broadening the ultrashort laser pulses in Kerr-lens mode-locked Ti:sapphire
lasers by net positive group delay dispersion has proven to be a fruitful
concept for scaling the pulse energy directly obtainable from a laser. This
paper presents for the first time theoretical and experimental results on
high-energy low repetition rate (14MHz) Cr:forsterite oscillator operating in
positive dispersion regime. Accurate dispersion adjustment is provided by
intracavity prisms. The laser generates spectrum of 100nm and 40fs pulses.
Output pulse energy is 30nJ, which is the highest energy per pulse obtained
directly from Cr:forsterite oscillators up to date.
Development of a tool for nanostructuring and multiphoton imaging with nanojoule
femtosecond laser pulses
Paper 7201-2 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): David Bruneel, Martin Schwarz, Fraunhofer-Institut für
Biomedizinische Technik (Germany); Eric Audouard, Lab. Hubert Curien (France);
Ronan Le Harzic, Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An integrated tool combining control and diagnostic for nanoprocessing of
bio-compatible and biological materials and also allowing multiphoton large area
laser scanner microscopy has been developped. This multi-function compact device
is of prime interest and can be considered as a novel tool for nanoprocessing in
material science, nanobiotechnology, nanomedicine. Applications in biomedicine
include, for example, optoporation, cells nanodrilling, nanocutting transfection
of cells, deactivation of cell organelles or investigation of cell dynamics but
also potentially useful in material science for the manufacture of waveguides,
gratings, micro fluidic devices, nanocontainers, data storage, nanolithography,
nanomarking,…
Optimizing stable mode-locked operation of Yb-doped femtosecond fiber laser
Paper 7195-90 of Conference 7195
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Mohamad Abdelalim, Yury Logvin, Univ. of Ottawa (Canada); Diaa A.
Khalil, Ain Shams Univ. (Egypt); Hanan Anis, Univ. of Ottawa (Canada)
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We report on a novel simple configuration of an Yb-doped fiber laser cavity
comprising only Yb-doped fiber and a saturable absorber element. Numerical
results show that stable mode-locked operation does exist in such a laser cavity
in a reasonable range of parameters. The conditions to obtain stable pulses are
investigated as a function of the Yb-fiber bandwidth, length, and gain
coefficient. The temporal and spectral behavior of the femtosecond pulses are
also studied for different input parameters. The instability dynamics of the
mode-locked pulse is also elucidated.
Parallel femtosecond laser processing with a computer-generated hologram
Paper 7201-48 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Satoshi Hasegawa, Utsunomiya Univ. (Japan)
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A computer-generated hologram provides the futures of high throughput and high
light-use efficiency to femtosecond laser processing. In parallel femtosecond
laser processing with a hologram, a precise control of diffraction peaks is
indispensable to fabricate enormous numbers of nanometer-scale structures
simultaneously. The optimized hologram has high uniformity of the diffraction
peaks in a computer reconstruction. However, the uniformity is decreased by the
spatial and temporal properties of the optical system. In this paper, we propose
some optimization methods of the hologram to improve the uniformity and
demonstrate the processing performance.
Self-phase modulation of mid-infrared femtosecond pulses in semiconductor
materials
Paper 7197-44 of Conference 7197
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Satoshi Ashihara, Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology (Japan)
and Japan Science and Technology Agency (Japan); Yusuke Kawahara, Tokyo Univ. of
Agriculture and Technology (Japan)
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We investigate the self-phase modulation of mid-infrared pulses in semiconductor
materials of Si, Ge, GaAs, and ZnSe, respectively. The mid-infrared pulses of
100 fs duration and 200 cm-1 bandwidth at the center wavelength around 3-7
micron are generated by the nonlinear frequency mixings. The generated
mid-infrared pulses with micro-joule pulse energy are focused onto the
semiconductor materials. At the peak intensity of more than 10 GW/cm2, the
spectral reshaping and broadening are observed for Si, Ge, and GaAs. The output
spectral bandwidth extends over 800 cm-1, accompanied by the nonlinear
absorption. ZnSe shows weaker self-phase modulation, but has higher
transmittance.
Waveguide fabrication with femtosecond laser pulse shaped by computer-generated
hologram
Paper 7201-47 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Jun'ichi Suzuki, Masahiro Yamaji, Shuhei Tanaka, New Glass Forum
(Japan)
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Femtosecond laser micromachining in glasses has been studied to fabricate
optical devices, such as waveguides, splitters, resonators, and so on. These
devices are written with irradiating many laser pulses whose energy is
adequately reduced from maximum laser energy.
In this work, we fabricate an optical waveguide using a computer-generated
hologram (CGH). We develop the CGH that can convert an intensity distribution of
an input femtosedond laser beam into that of a line beam. The line beam shaped
by the CGH is focused inside fused silica, and consequently, a linear waveguide
of more than 1 mm long is created. This fabrication technique with CGH can
provide higher laser energy efficiency and shorter machining time, since a
single femtosecond laser pulse is used. Although the dot structure fabricated
with CGH has been reported, the waveguide fabrication using CGH is first
achievement, to our knowledge.
Tunable high-energy femtosecond soliton fiber laser based on hollow-core
photonic bandgap fiber
Paper 7195-36 of Conference 7195
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 8:30 AM
Author(s): Pascal Dupriez, Fianium Ltd. (United Kingdom); Frédéric Gérôme, Univ.
de Limoges (France); Jonathan C. Knight, Univ. of Bath (United Kingdom); John
Clowes, Fianium Ltd. (United Kingdom); William J. Wadsworth, Univ. of Bath
(United Kingdom)
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A high power tunable femtosecond soliton-based source using a simple combination
of a high energy fiber laser and hollow-core photonic bandgap fiber (HC-PBGF) is
reported. Fiber amplified 5.5 ps pulses emitted at 1064 nm and strongly chirped
by self-phase modulation are compressed in anomalously dispersive HC-PBGF
enabling formation of 450 fs solitons. Wavelength tuneability is demonstrated
through Raman self-frequency shift above 220nJ of input pulse energy. These
solitonic pulses are then frequency doubled with remarkable conversion
efficiency in a nonlinear crystal to demonstrate a femtosecond green laser
tunable from 534 nm to 548 nm.
Femtosecond fiber CPA system with 325-W average power
Paper 7195-39 of Conference 7195
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 9:10 AM – 9:30 AM
Author(s): Tino Eidam, Fabian Röser, Enrico Seise, Thomas Gottschall, Steffen
Hädrich, Jan Rothhardt, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany); Thomas
Schreiber, Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering
(Germany); Jens Limpert, Andreas Tünnermann, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena
(Germany)
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We report on an ytterbium-doped fiber CPA system delivering 325 W of average
power at 40 MHz repetition rate corresponding to 8.2 µJ pulse energy. The pulse
duration is as short as 375 fs resulting in 22 MW of peak power. To the best of
our knowledge this is the highest average output power of a solid state laser in
the ultra-short pulse regime.
Energy scaling of femtosecond and picosecond fiber oscillators beyond the
microjoule level
Paper 7195-40 of Conference 7195
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 9:50 AM
Author(s): Bülend Ortac, Martin Baumgartl, Oliver Schmidt, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ.
Jena (Germany); Ammar A. Hideur, Univ. de Rouen (France); Isabelle Sagnes, Ctr.
National de la Recherche Scientifique (France); Arnaud Garnache, Univ.
Montpellier II (France); Jens Limpert, Andreas Tünnermann, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ.
Jena (Germany)
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We report on the generation of microjoule level picosecond and sub-picosecond
pulses from a mode-locked Yb-doped LMA fiber laser operating in the purely
normal dispersion regime. The self-starting oscillator stabilized with slow
relaxation semiconductor SAM emits 11 W of average power at a pulse repetition
rate of 10 MHz, corresponding to a pulse energy of 1.1 µJ. The laser produces a
0.4 nm narrow emission line with 310 ps output pulses. In femtosecond operation,
the oscillator stabilized with fast relaxation SAM emits 9 W of average power at
a pulse repetition rate of 9.7 MHz, corresponding to a pulse energy of 927 nJ.
The laser produces positively chirped output pulses of 8 ps, which are
compressed down to 711 fs, corresponding to megawatt peak power. To our
knowledge this is the first time that mode-locked fiber oscillators can generate
higher pulse energies of beyond microjoule-level at high average output power.
All polarization-maintaining fiber chirped-pulse amplification system for
microjoule femtosecond pulses
Paper 7195-41 of Conference 7195
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 9:50 AM – 10:10 AM
Author(s): Shian Zhou, Cornell Univ. (United States) and Sunx Ltd. (Japan);
Tetsuji Takamido, Rakesh Bhandari, Sunx Ltd. (Japan); Andy Chong, Frank W. Wise,
Cornell Univ. (United States)
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We report a practical fiber source of femtosecond pulses with microjoule
energies. The all-fiber system produces 480 fs pulses at 220 kHz repetition rate
and 5 J pulse energy. The system employs polarization-maintaining fiber for
stability, and the double-clad amplifier is pumped via fiber combiners. In
addition to the main performance parameters, this integrated system offers
excellent beam quality (M2 < 1.1), pulse contrast (40 dB), polarization
extinction ratio (36 dB), and environmental stability for long-term operation.
Femtosecond carrier dynamics in quasi-one-dimensional topological compounds
Paper 7214-52 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 11:11 AM – 11:39 AM
Author(s): Yasunori Toda, Hokkaido Univ. (Japan)
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Due to the recent progress of material science, quasi-one-dimensional (1D)
materials provide an opportunity for investigating the influence of topology and
dimensionality of materials on their optical and electrical properties. In this
study, we report the phase transition properties of such quasi-1D compounds by
utilizing an ultrafast optical spectroscopy. Photoinduced nonequilibrium carrier
dynamics yield characteristic features around the phase transition temperatures.
We also discuss the influence of topology and dimensionality on the phase
transitions by using polarization and excitation energy dependences of the
transient signals and their spatial characteristics.
Multiscale modeling of phase changes during femtosecond laser metal interaction
Paper 7202-10 of Conference 7202
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:00 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Lan Jiang, Xin Li, Beijing Institute of Technology (China); Hai-Lung
Tsai, Missouri Univ. of Science and Technology (United States)
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A femtosecond pulse in some aspects fundamentally changes the laser-material
interaction mechanism compared with a long pulse. Although many studies have
been conducted, it remains a challenge to fundamentally understand the
dissipation of the absorbed energy into lattice and the corresponding phase
change mechanisms. This paper studies the femtosecond laser pulse-train
processing of the metal thin films. In our multiscale model, molecular dynamics
simulation is employed in the ablation subsystem and the improved
two-temperature model is applied to heat conduction subsystem. The phase change
mechanisms are investigated with the focus on melting and vaporization.
MEMS for femtosecond pulse shaping applications
Paper 7209-8 of Conference 7209
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:40 PM – 5:00 PM
Author(s): Ariana Rondi, Jérôme Extermann, Stefan M. Weber, Univ. de Genève
(Switzerland); Jonathan D. Roslund, Matthias H. Roth, Princeton Univ. (United
States); Luigi Bonacina, Univ. de Genève (Switzerland); Herschel A. Rabitz,
Princeton Univ. (United States); Jean-Pierre Wolf, Univ. de Genève (Switzerland)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
There are many potential applications for MEMS micromirror devices for
femtosecond pulse shaping applications. Their broadband reflectivity gives them
an advantage in comparison to devices such as liquid crystal- and acousto-optical
modulators because of the possibility to directly address UV-absorbing
molecules. The identification and discrimination of biomolecules which exhibit
almost the same spectra has sparked some interest in the last years as it allows
real-time, environmental, optical monitoring. With quantum control schemes, a
distinction between quasi identical biomolecules (Riboflavin and Flavin Mono
Nucleotide) could be performed. Here, we present the last developments using the
FhG-IPMS MEMS phase former capable of accomplishing such goals.
Investigation of the photorefractive effect in lithium-niobate crystals using
femtosecond laser pulses
Paper 7197-29 of Conference 7197
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 5:20 PM – 5:40 PM
Author(s): Dominik Maxein, Johanna Bückers, Daniel Haertle, Karsten Buse, Univ.
Bonn (Germany)
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The photorefractive effect plays an important role in many applications of
lithium niobate crystals (LiNbO3). We compare in this contribution writing and
erasure of gratings in Fe-doped LiNbO3 with fs laser pulses and with
continuous-wave light: Holographic scattering is pronounced for cw, but weaker
or even absent in some samples for fs pulses.
Furthermore, in oxidized LiNbO3:Fe, the writing times with pulses are much
smaller than those obtained with cw light.
Supported by the DFG and the Deutsche Telekom AG.
Probing photoelectronic emission from nanostructures based on conductive atomic
force microscopy and femtosecond laser illumination
Paper 7201-39 of Conference 7201
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 5:20 PM – 5:40 PM
Author(s): Nipun Misra, David J. Hwang, Costas P. Grigoropoulos, Univ. of
California, Berkeley (United States); Emmanuel Stratakis, Emmanuel Spanakis,
Institute of Electronic Structure and Laser of the Foundation for Research and
Technology-Hellas (Greece) and Univ. of Crete (Greece) and Technological
Educational Institute of Crete (Greece); Costas Fotakis, Panagiotis Tzanetakis,
Institute of Electronic Structure and Laser of the Foundation for Research and
Technology-Hellas (Greece)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Transient optical absorption upon femtosecond pulse irradiation in lithium-niobate
crystals
Paper 7197-37 of Conference 7197
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 10:00 AM – 10:20 AM
Author(s): Satoshi Ashihara, Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology (Japan)
and Japan Science And Technology Agency (Japan); Satoru Sasamoto, Tokyo Univ. of
Agriculture and Technology (Japan); Junji Hirohashi, Oxide NIMS Corp. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Transient optical absorption induced by two-photon excitation of carriers in
lithium niobates is investigated by the pump-probe experiments. The measured
samples are the undoped and MgO-doped lithium niobates of either congruent or
stoichiometric composition. In any of the samples, the absorption at the
wavelength of 800 nm builds up within 100 fs and lasts for longer than 100 ps.
The pump-intensity dependence as well as the amplitude of the induced absorption
is similar among the measured samples regardless of the Li/Nb ratio or the MgO-doping.
The results give new insight into the carrier relaxation dynamics in this
ferroelectric crystal.
Femtosecond pump-probe characterization of high-pressure grown AlxGa1-xN single
crystals
Paper 7216-60 of Conference 7216
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 12:00 PM – 12:15 PM
Author(s): Roman Sobolewski, Jie Zhang, Univ. of Rochester (United States);
Andrey Belousov, Jan Jun, Kathrin Hametner, Detlef Günther, Janusz Karpinski,
Bertram Batlogg, ETH Zürich (Switzerland)
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We report our experimental studies on the time-resolved carrier dynamics in high
quality AlxGa1-xN single crystals, grown using a solution technique in a high
nitrogen gas pressure system. Our optical measurements were performed using a
femtosecond, pump-probe spectroscopy, by invoking a two-photon absorption of the
pump beam and scanning the transient differential transmissivity (ΔT/T) signal
of the probe beam. We were able to determine that the optical bandgap of
AlxGa1-xN (x = 0.83-0.85) was in the 5.904-5.961 eV range. Our time-resolved ΔT/T
transients, consisted of an initial 125-fs electron-phonon relaxation, followed
by a much slower, ~75-ps-long, decay.
High speed analog-to-digital conversion with silicon photonics
Paper 7220-10 of Conference 7220
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 2:00 PM
Author(s): Charles W. Holzwarth, Reja Amatya, Mohammad Araghchini, Jonathan R.
Birge, Hyunil Byun, Li-Jin Chen, Marcus S. Dahlem, Nicole A. DiLello, Fuwan Gan,
Judy L. Hoyt, Erich P. Ippen, Franz X. Kärtner, Anatoly M. Khilo, Jung Won Kim,
Meekyung Kim, Ali R. Motamedi, Jason S. Orcutt, Matthew J. Park, Michael H.
Perrott, Milos A. Popovic, Rajeev J. Ram, Henry I. Smith, Guirong Zhou,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States); Steven J. Spector,
Theodore M. Lyszczarz, Michael W. Geis, Donna M. Lennon, Jung U. Yoon, Matthew
E. Grein, Robert T. Schulein, MIT Lincoln Lab. (United States)
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Sampling rates of high-performance electronic analog-to-digital converters (ADC)
are fundamentally limited by the timing jitter of the electronic clock. This
limit is overcome in photonic ADC’s by taking advantage of the ultra-low timing
jitter of femtosecond lasers. We have developed designs and strategies for a
photonic ADC that is capable of 40 GSa/sec at 8 bits. This system requires a
femtosecond laser with a repetition rate of 2 GHz and timing jitter below 30 fs.
In addition to a femtosecond laser this system calls for the integration of
multiple photonic components including: a broadband modulator, optical filter
banks, and photodetectors.
In vivo multiphoton tomography using a high NA GRIN microendoscope
Paper 7183-44 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 8:25 AM
Author(s): Karsten König, JenLab GmbH (Germany)
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Multiphoton tomographs based on femtosecond laser and GRIN lens technology in
combination with flexible scan heads have been developed for clinical
high-resolution tissue imaging and small animal research. The novel multiphoton
tissue tomograph possesses an articulated mirror arm in combination with a
flexible scan head which includes galvoscanner, a piezodriven focusing optics
and a PMT photodetector as well as a rigid GRIN microendoscope. 250 MHz fiber
based femtosecond lasers as well as 80 MHz tunable Ti:Sa lasers have been tested
as source for two-photon SHG , autofluorescence, and FLIM imaging
Optimizing CARS signal using coherent control methods
Paper 7183-25 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:45 AM – 10:00 AM
Author(s): Vladimir S. Malinovsky, MagiQ Technologies, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Recently we have shown that linearly chirped ultrafast pulses can be utilized to
maximize CARS coherence. The method, uses the chirp sign variation at the
central time, and gives robust adiabatic excitation of the resonant vibrational
mode. Here we analyze influence of fast decoherence in the molecular samples and
compare robustness and selectivity of the method to other excitation proposals.
We demonstrate that the proposed adiabatic method allows achieving chemical
sensitivity with high resolution and can be used to obtain CARS signal in
molecular systems with coherence times of several hundred of femtoseconds.
Ultrafast Fiber Lasers
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Martin E. Fermann, IMRA America, Inc. (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Evaluation of effects of microstructures on titanium surfaces, applied by
femtosecond laser, on human auricular chondrocytes by in-vitro cell culture
Paper 7161C-305 of Conference 7161C
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 9:20 AM – 9:40 AM
Author(s): Slavomir Biedron, Justus F. R. Ilgner, Univ. Hospital Aachen
(Germany); Elena Fadeeva, Boris N. Chichkov, Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V.
(Germany); Martin Westhofen M.D., Univ. Hospital Aachen (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
This study was performed to evaluate how the influence of selected
microstructures on titanium surfaces on the growth of human auricular
chondrocytes can be studied in vitro. Human chondrocytes were seeded on tissue
culture dishes and cultured for up to 3 passages. The phenotype was monitored by
means of light microscopy and immunohistochemistry. Titanium discs in samples of
5mm diameter and 0,25mm thickness were structured by means of a Ti:Sapphire
femtosecond laser. These samples were incubated with subcultured chondrocytes
and the cells were grown to confluence. If the cells are seeded on titanium
samples at a density of 0,5 x 10e4 cells/cm2 it takes 5-7 days until the discs
are overgrown. Using freshly harvested cartilage about 10e7 cells/g can be
obtained.
Selective cellular membrane ablation by the enhanced near-field scattering of
femtosecond laser light by membrane-bound gold nanostructures
Paper 7203-3 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:20 AM – 9:40 AM
Author(s): Daniel S. Eversole, Ozgur Ekici, Rick Harrison, Nicholas J. Durr,
Adela Ben-Yakar, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United States)
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The intense near-field scattering by noble-metal nanoparticles in the
near-infrared wavelength regime can be exploited to initiate plasma-mediated
ablation for the precise manipulation of cellular membranes. We describe a
novel, non-thermal femtosecond laser ablation process for selective cancer
removal utilizing gold nanoparticles. The membrane of epithelial breast cancer
cells (MDA-MB-468) was targeted in-vitro with 50 nm gold nanospheres
functionalized with anti-EGFR antibodies. We observed photoinduced permeability
of cellular membranes upon exposure to 250-fs, 760 nm laser pulses with as
little as 1.4 mJ/cm2 laser fluence, as determined by FITC-Dextran intake.
Labeled cells showed 33 times reduction in laser fluence necessary for membrane
permeability when compared to unlabeled cells.
Ultrafast semiconductor quantum optics
Paper 7214-13 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 3:12 PM – 3:40 PM
Author(s): Rudolf Bratschitsch, Univ. Konstanz (Germany)
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Semiconductor quantum dots are promising systems for robust and scalable quantum
information processing. Ultrafast sequences of coherent quantum operations may
be envisioned with femtosecond light pulses, if the involved quantum states are
separated by at least tens of meV. We present two-color femtosecond pump-probe
spectroscopy on a single self-assembled CdSe/ZnSe quantum dot. The transient
quantum dynamics is probed with resonant excitation and detection. Ultrafast
Coulomb renormalization and single exciton gain are observed with these first
resonant pump-probe measurements on a single-electron system. We will also
discuss strategies to increase the light-quantum dot coupling via optical
nanoantennas and microresonators.
High-throughput on-chip In vivo neural regeneration studies using femtosecond
laser nano-surgery and microfluidics
Paper 7203-42 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 3:20 PM – 3:50 PM
Author(s): C. Rohde, C. Gilleland, C. Samara, F. Zeng, Mehmet F. Yanik,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States)
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We present on-chip technologies for high-throughput screening of small-animal
(C. elegans), and also use of these technologies for in vivo discovery of
genetic/drug factors in neural regeneration. We demonstrate high speed
microfluidic sorters, which can rapidly isolate and immobilize awake animals in
a well-defined geometry for screening phenotypic features at sub-cellular
resolutions non-invasively without use of anesthesia or cooling. We show use of
these technologies for three-dimensional two-photon imaging and femtosecond
laser nano-surgery on awake animals for high-throughput neural degeneration and
regeneration studies. We show integrated chips containing individually
addressable screening-chambers for incubation and exposure of individual worms
to RNAi/compounds, and high-resolution time-lapse imaging of many immobilized
animals on a single chip without anesthesia. We report devices for delivery of
compound libraries in standard multi-well plates to microfluidic devices, and
also for rapid dispensing of screened animals into multi-well plates. When used
in various combinations, these devices facilitate a variety of high-throughput
assays including mutagenesis, RNAi and drug screens at sub-cellular resolution
on awake animals, as well as large-scale on-chip in vivo neural degeneration and
regeneration studies using femtosecond laser microsurgery. We will report the
recent advances we made using these technologies.
Ultra-compact (palm-top size), low-cost, maintenance-free (>3000 h),
1.5-kW-peak-power diode-pumped femtosecond solid-state laser source for
multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-114 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Shogo Yamazoe, Tadashi Kasamatsu, FUJIFILM Advanced Research Labs.
(Japan)
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We demonstrate a novel practical femtosecond laser source, which is, to our
knowledge, the smallest size and potentially low cost. The innovation is the
simple linear-cavity design utilizing soliton mode-locking induced by precise
group velocity dispersion control. Average output power of 680 mW and pulse
width of 162 fs were obtained at around 1045 nm from a 980-nm diode-pumped
Yb3+:KY(WO4)2 laser. The pulse repetition rate was 2.8 GHz, leading to a pulse
peak power of 1.5 kW, which is sufficient for biomedical imaging. The laser
module including the laser diode pump system has a footprint of only 8×4 cm2.
Stable operation of 3000 hours was demonstrated with fluctuation of less than
10%.
Enhancing two-color absorption, self-phase modulation, and Raman microscopy
signatures in tissue with femtosecond laser pulse shaping
Paper 7183-31 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:00 PM – 1:25 PM
Author(s): Warren S. Warren, Sr., Martin C. Fischer, Duke Univ. (United States);
Ivan Piletic, Stanford Univ. (United States); Dan Fu, Thomas E. Matthews,
Prathyush Samenini, Duke Univ. (United States)
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Nonlinear microscopies (most commonly, two-photon fluorescence, second harmonic
generation, and CARS) have had notable successes in imaging a variety of
endogenous and exogenous targets in recent years. These methods which generate
light at a color different from any of the exciting laser pulses, which makes
the signal relatively easy to detect. Our work has focused on developing
microscopy techniques using a wider range of nonlinear signatures (two-photon
absorption of nonfluorescence species, self phase modulation) which have some
specific advantages- for example, in recent papers we have shown that we can
differentiate between different types of melanin in pigmented lesions, can image
hemoglobin and its oxygenation, and can measure neuronal firing. In general,
these signatures do not generate light at a different color, and we rely on the
advantages of femtosecond laser pulse shaping methods to amplify the signals and
make them visible (for example, using heterodyne detection of the induced signal
with one of the copropagating laser pulses). Here we extend this work to
stimulated Raman and minimal-color CARS geometries. In the simplest experiments,
both colors arise from filtering a single fs laser pulse, then modulating
afterwards; in other cases, we demonstrate that spectral hole refilling can
retain high frequency resolution in Raman and CARS geometries with femtosecond
laser pulses.
Synthesis of size-tunable polymer protected metallic nano-alloys by femtosecond
laser-based ablation and seed growth
Paper 7192-22 of Conference 7192
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:40 AM – 9:00 AM
Author(s): Sébastien Besner, Andrei V. Kabashin, Ecole Polytechnique de Montréal
(Canada); Francoise M. Winnik, Univ. of Montréal (Canada); Michel Meunier, Ecole
Polytechnique de Montréal (Canada)
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A green femtosecond laser-based method has been developed to produce stable,
size tunable (3 to ~100nm) and low dispersed gold nanoparticles. This method
implies the formation of initial nano-sized seeds (<10nm) by laser ablation of a
gold target immersed in an aqueous solution of biopolymers and the ripening of
those seeds by a secondary femtosecond supercontinuum irradiation. The formation
of several nano-alloys (AgAu, AuCu, AuCo, etc.) was also achieved by irradiating
a mixture of different elemental colloidal compounds. Biopolymers of different
concentration enabled in-situ surface functionalization and size control during
the process. Such nanoparticles are for great interest in biomedical
applications.
On the use of femtosecond lasers to fabricate small optical instruments made
from fused-silica monoliths
Paper 7203-25 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:40 AM – 12:10 PM
Author(s): Philippe Bado, Mark A. Dugan, Ali A. Said, Thomas F. Haddock,
Translume, Inc. (United States)
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We present some small optical instruments fabricated with femtosecond laser
pulses. These instruments, made from monolithic fused silica substrates,
incorporate an extensive collection of optical and micro-mechanical elements. A
single manufacturing step was used to define both the optical and the mechanical
features. This approach dramatically simplifies overall fabrication and
eliminates alignment issues associated with sequential fabrication processes.
On the use of femtosecond lasers to fabricate small optical instruments made
from fused-silica monoliths
Paper 7201-25 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:40 AM – 12:10 PM
Author(s): Philippe Bado, Mark A. Dugan, Ali A. Said, Thomas F. Haddock,
Translume, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We present some small optical instruments fabricated with femtosecond laser
pulses. These instruments, made from monolithic fused silica substrates,
incorporate an extensive collection of optical and micro-mechanical elements. A
single manufacturing step was used to define both the optical and the mechanical
features. This approach dramatically simplifies overall fabrication and
eliminates alignment issues associated with sequential fabrication processes.
Integration of Bragg grating waveguides and microfluidic channels with
femtosecond laser irradiation for refractive index sensing
Paper 7207-17 of Conference 7207
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:00 PM – 2:20 PM
Author(s): Valeria A. Maselli, Jason R. Grenier, Stephen Ho, Peter R. Herman,
Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
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Microfluidic channels and Bragg Grating Waveguides (BGWs) were simultaneously
fabricated inside fused silica glass by means of femtosecond laser exposure
followed by HF chemical etching. Evanescent field penetration of the waveguide
mode into the parallel microfluidic channel induced Bragg resonant wavelength
shifts which enabled refractive index characterization of the fluidic medium in
the 1 to 1.442 range. Device geometry, wall smoothness and Bragg resonance were
optimized for high sensitivity sensing at 1550 nm wavelength, while reference
gratings were employed for temperature and strain compensation. The device opens
new directions for optical sensing in 3D optofluidic and reactor microsystems.
Two-photon polymerization for fabrication of three-dimensional micro- and
nanostructures over a large area
Paper 7204-13 of Conference 7204
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:20 PM – 2:40 PM
Author(s): Mangirdas Malinauskas, Vytautas Purlys, Marius Rutkauskas, Roaldas
Gadonas, Vilnius Univ. (Lithuania)
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Two-photon polymerization has emerged as a technology for rapid fabrication of
three-dimensional micro-structures with nano-scale resolution. In most cases,
femtosecond Ti:Sapphire laser was applied as an irradiation source to solidify
the photoresin. Here, we present a system for two-photon polymerization which
utilizes Yb:KGW femtosecond laser’s second harmonic to initiate nonlinear
polymerization. Shorter irradiation wavelength enables one to focus laser beam
to a smaller spot. High repetition rate and high average power capacitates to
fabricate three-dimensional structures over large area rapidly. Results proving
resolution to be up to ~100 nm and some micro-structures over millimeter area
are presented in this talk.
Chirped four-wave mixing in the largely normal dispersion regime from
femtosecond pulse-pumped photonic crystal fiber
Paper 7195-99 of Conference 7195
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Haohua Tu, Zhi Jiang, Daniel L. Marks, Stephen A. Boppart M.D., Univ.
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (United States)
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A four-wave mixing process of 4700 cm-1 Stokes-shift is stimulated by pumping a
20-cm commercial large-mode-area photonic crystal fiber with amplified
Ti:sapphire femtosecond pulses. The phase-matching condition is realized through
an intermodal scheme which promotes the process in the largely normal dispersion
regime of the fiber. The walk-off effect of the interacting pulses is minimized
by introducing an initial chirp to the pump pulses. Conversion efficiency over
7% from near-infrared pump input to visible anti-Stokes signal can be achieved.
Continuum generation in optical fiber for high-resolution holographic coherence
domain imaging application
Paper 7197-50 of Conference 7197
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Linghui Li, Vitaly E. Gruzdev, Ping Yu, Jinn K. Chen, Univ. of
Missouri, Columbia (United States)
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High pulse energy continuum generation in a conventional silica-based optical
fiber is studied and applied to a holographic coherence domain imaging system.
In our experiment, the pump laser is a femtosecond laser with a pulse width of
180 fs, wavelength of 775 nm and repetition rate of 1 KHz. The FWHM of the
femtosecond laser is 5.4 nm. We measured the FWHM of the continuum generation as
a function of incident pulse energy. The maximum FWHM is about 8x higher than
that of the input pulses. The stability was analyzed by using a frequency domain
Fourier transform method.
Femtosecond, nanosecond, and continuous-wave nonlinear optical properties of
(H2)2SnPc, Sn(OH)2Pc, Sn(Cl)2Pc studied using Z-scan technique
Paper 7197-40 of Conference 7197
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Venugopal R. Soma, Univ. of Hyderabad (India)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Phthalocyanines and their analogues/derivatives are macromolecules with large
number of delocalized electrons possessing attractive third-order nonlinear
optical properties with prominent applications in the areas of optical limiting
and ultrafast all-optical switching. Here we present our results on the
femtosecond, nanosecond, and continuous wave (cw) experimental nonlinear optical
studies of Sn(H2)2Pc, Sn(OH)2Pc, and Sn(Cl)2Pc using the Z-scan technique
Temperature-dependent properties of fiber-Bragg gratings generated with
UV-femtosecond pulses and with UV-nanosecond pulses
Paper 7195-67 of Conference 7195
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Eric Lindner, Martin Becker, Sven Brückner, Manfred W. Rothhardt,
Hartmut Bartelt, Institute of Photonic Technology (Germany)
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The temperature dependent properties of fiber Bragg gratings are not only of
importance for understanding the general stability and degradation properties of
such gratings, but are also essential for sensor applications, such as for
direct temperature measurements or for general fiber sensing at high
temperatures. We have therefore compared the annealing properties of fiber Bragg
gratings made under different interferometric inscription conditions, namely
with UV femtosecond and with UV nanosecond pulses in a modified Talbot
interferometer setup. Different types of fibers such as Ge doped fibers and pure
silica fibers have been used for comparison of the achieved properties. The
gratings inscribed with a UV nanosecond excimer laser show specific annealing
properties depending on the energy density and exposure duration besides the
expected color center formation (for low energy density TypeI gratings) or the
structural damages in the glass material (for high energy density TypeII
gratings). Furthermore, nanosecond gratings with certain characteristics show
temperature induced grating reflectivity changes which indicate stress in the
exposed area of the fiber. The classification of refractive index modifications
in the fiber and of grating types (TypeI/II) is investigated and compared for
both the UV femtosecond and the nanosecond laser pulse inscribed gratings.
Demonstration of inscription and ablation of phase masks for the production of
1st, 2nd, and 3rd order FBG gratings using femtosecond light
Paper 7205-36 of Conference 7205
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 3:50 PM – 4:10 PM
Author(s): Graham N. Smith, Aston Univ. (United Kingdom); Kyriacos Kalli, Cyprus
Institute of Technology (Cyprus); Ian Bennion, Kate Sugden, Aston Univ. (United
Kingdom)
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We present, to our knowledge, the first example of femtosecond
inscription/ablation of phase masks used to produce 1st, 2nd and 3rd order Fibre
Bragg Gratings in SMF-28. The work demonstrates the proof of concept and
flexibility for the use of femtosecond lasers to make complex and reproducible
phase masks. This approach has the potential to rival e-beam fabrication of
phase masks and has the advantage of not requiring an acid etch stage.
Using these phase masks, 1st and higher order fibre Bragg gratings were
inscribed in a hydrogen loaded photosensitive fibre and reflectivities over 30dB
were attained.
Ultrafast far-infrared optics of carbon nanotubes
Paper 7214-9 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:20 PM – 1:48 PM
Author(s): Christian Frischkorn, Freie Univ. Berlin (Germany)
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Time-resolved THz spectroscopy is used to investigate the carrier dynamics in
carbon nanotubes, which allows to monitor the energy relaxation of the optically
excited electrons. The energy of the pump pulse initially deposited into the
electronic system is rapidly dissipated to only few strongly coupled optical
phonons which heat up within few hundreds of femtoseconds. Subsequent cooling of
these phonon modes is observed on a picosecond time-scale which is substantially
faster in nanotubes than in graphite pointing to stronger lattice
anharmonicities. Temperature dependent measurements show the hot phonon decay
proceeding via generation of cold phonons like high-frequency optical phonon and
radial breathing modes.
Imaging neuronal population activity with random access two-photon microscope
Paper 7186-26 of Conference 7186
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM
Author(s): Shaoqun Zeng, Huazhong Univ. of Science and Technology (China)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Two-photon microscopy has grown up to be an important technique in biology
research, particularly in exploring the neuronal functions of the neurons. With
large penetration depth and three-dimensional selectivity, this technique has
been able to address the neuro-computing in brain slice or even in live animals.
However, its imaging rate is limited by the mechanic scanning mechanism and
cannot satisfy the requirement for imaging the encoding pattern of the neuron
populations or integrating sites such as the spines. Laser beam steering with
acousto-optic deflector (AOD) provides a fast scanning rate, as well as high
precision, and high stability due to its inertial-free scanning mechanism.
Moreover, 2D AOD scanning allows fast random access to each site of interest,
and can thus devote dwell time to pixels of interest and increase both the
signal-to-noise ratio and the frame-capture rate. However, scanning femtosecond
laser beam with AOD is frustrated by the dispersive nature of the acousto-optic
effect and crystal material. This presentation first shows a novel method to
solve the problem of dispersion compensation. Based on this dispersion
compensated AOD scanner, a random scanning two-photon microscope has been
implemented to provide fast and flexible imaging rate with higher signal to
noise ratio. A theoretical analysis is presented to explain the evolution of the
femtosecond laser pulse in this kind of microscope. Finally, biological
experiment is demonstrated to show the potential of recording fast neuronal
activities with this technique.
In vivo multiphoton tomography in skin aging studies
Paper 7161A-116 of Conference 7161A
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 2:15 PM – 2:30 PM
Author(s): Karsten König, JenLab GmbH (Germany)
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Multiphoton tomography based on high resolution optical sectioning of the
epidermis and the upper dermis has been used to analyze the morphology of the
epidermal-dermal junction as well as the ratio of elastin to collagen (SAAID
index).
The signal of elastin and intracellular endogenous fluorophores was obtained by
two-photon excitation whereas collagen structures were imaged by the detection
of second harmonic generation (SHG).
The in vivo measurements on volunteers were performed with the novel multiphoton
tissue tomograph based on a compact femtosecond near infrared laser system and a
flexible scan and detector head.
Ultrafast adaptive nanooptics
Paper 7214-10 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:48 PM – 2:16 PM
Author(s): Walter Pfeiffer, Univ. Bielefeld (Germany); Tobias Brixner, Dmitri V.
Voronine, Univ. Würzburg (Germany); F. Javier Garcia de Abajo, Consejo Superior
de Investigaciones Científicas (Spain); Martin Aeschlimann, Univ. Kaiserslautern
(Germany); Michael K. Bauer, Christian-Albrechts-Univ. zu Kiel (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Control of spatial and temporal properties of near-fields provides fascinating
possibilities for nanoscale spectroscopy and manipulation of quantum systems.
Recent progress to flexibly control such near-fields using optimally
polarization-shaped femtosecond laser pulses is presented.
Photoinduced ultrafast structural dynamics of nanomaterials
Paper 7214-14 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 4:00 PM – 4:28 PM
Author(s): Jau Tang, Pying Yu, Po-Tze Tai, Sheng-Hsien Lin, Academia Sinica
(Taiwan)
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We will report our study of photoinduced structural dynamics of nanomaterials of
various shapes and sizes by a femtosecond laser heating pulse as detected by
time-resolved electron diffraction or transient optical absorption. This work
improves the understanding of nanoscale heat transfer and the ultrafast
structural dynamics in nanomaterials such as thin films, spheres, prisms, disks,
rods, pyramids and cubes. This work allows us to elucidate the roles of dynamic
expansion/contraction and the more well-known static linear expansion.
Multiphoton microscopy of near infrared dyes
Paper 7183-110 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Siavash Yazdanfar, Chun Zhan, Chulmin Joo, GE Global Research (United
States); Mikhail Berezin, Samuel Achilefu, Washington Univ. in St. Louis School
of Medicine (United States)
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We describe multiphoton microscopy using a compact, turnkey femtosecond fiber to
excite a new class of near infrared carbocyanine dyes. This system offers
advantages in penetration depth, contrast, and simplicity as compared to
conventional multiphoton microscopy.
New method to measure laser-beam spatial parameters
Paper 7194-6 of Conference 7194
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:10 AM – 11:30 AM
Author(s): George Nemes, ASTiGMAT (United States); Magda Ulmeanu, Marian
Zamfirescu, National Institute for Lasers, Plasma and Radiation Physics
(Romania)
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A new method to measure the laser beam spatial parameters (waist size,
divergence, Rayleigh range, beam propagation ratio) is proposed and
experimentally verified. The method is based on rotating cylindrical optics (VariSpot
by ASTiGMAT) and measuring the beam sizes in a fixed plane, as opposed to the
conventional method of measuring different beam sizes at different positions
along the beam axis. Experimental results on a femtosecond laser beam measured
using both the classical and the new method reveal a satisfactory agreement
between the two methods.
Random lasing from quantum-dot colloids suspended polymer
Paper 7194-11 of Conference 7194
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:50 PM – 2:10 PM
Author(s): Seiji Takeda, Minoru Obara, Keio Univ. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We experimentally demonstrate Random Lasing (RL) using quantum dots (QD)
colloids as laser gain medium. QD will cover the whole visible range of the
spectrum. QD colloids (CdSe coated by ZnS) are suspended inside polymer (PMMA)
with scatterers (TiO2 particles), and stimulated by SHG of Ti: sapphire
femtosecond laser pulses. We measured the emission intensity and spectrum from
the medium, and discuss the oscillating modes with FDTD methods. Our results
will show the possibility of RL application for new light emitting device.
Large aperture chirped-Bragg gratings in PTR glass for fs-pulse
stretching/compression
Paper 7195-11 of Conference 7195
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:20 PM – 2:40 PM
Author(s): Vadim I. Smirnov, Ion Cohanoshi, Eugeniu V. Rotari, OptiGrate (United
States); Leonid B. Glebov, College of Optics & Photonics/Univ. of Central
Florida (United States)
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This paper reports on latest developments of chirped Bragg gratings manufactured
in photo thermo refractive glass for femtosecond pulses stretching/compression.
High efficiency 30 mm thick gratings are developed for 1050 and 1550 nm with
bandwidth exceeding 20 nm.
Enhanced three-photon-excited photoluminescence in transition-metal-doped
semiconductor quantum dots
Paper 7224-21 of Conference 7224
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:30 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Wei Ji, National Univ. of Singapore (Singapore)
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We present a theoretical model on three-photon absorption (3PA) cross-sections
in semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) and compare it to the femtosecond Z-scan
data on CdSe, ZnS and ZnSe/ZnS QDs. In addition, we also demonstrate the
enhancement of 3PA in transition-metal doped ZnSe/ZnS QDs. Taking into account
of the enhancement in three-photo-excited photoluminescence, such double
enhancements make ZnSe/ZnS QDs doped with transition-metal ions a promising
candidate for bio-imaging applications.
Fiber lasers for CARS microscopy
Paper 7183-24 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:20 PM – 5:45 PM
Author(s): Frank W. Wise, Cornell Univ. (United States)
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Development toward a stable fiber source of tunable pulses for CARS microscopy
will be reported. A stable oscillator supplies high-energy and transform-limited
picosecond or femtosecond pulses. Initial results on the generation of
synchronized tunable pulses for Raman excitation will be presented.
Rotational second harmonic generation endoscopy with 1µm fiber laser system
Paper 7172-24 of Conference 7172
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM
Author(s): Gangjun Liu, Tuqiang Xie, Lingfeng Yu, Ivan V. Tomov, Beckman Laser
Institute (United States); Jianping Su, Univ. of California, Irvine (United
States); Zhongping Chen, Beckman Laser Institute (United States) and Univ. of
California, Irvine (United States)
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We present a kind of rotational two photon mciroendoscopy for 1µm fiber
femtosecond laser. The fiber laser provide ultrashort femto-second pulses with
center wavelength at 1.034µm and repetition rate of 50MH. The rotational probe
is based on double cladding photonic crystal fiber (CD PCF) fiber, Grin lens ,
microprism and rotational MEMS motor.
Imaging skin tissue in vivo with video-rate two-photon autofluorescence
microscopy
Paper 7183-48 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 9:25 AM – 9:45 AM
Author(s): Chunqiang Li, Massachusetts General Hospital (United States); Costas
M. Pitsillides, Boston Univ. (United States) and Massachusetts General Hospital
(United States); Judith M. Runnels, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (United States)
and Massachusetts General Hospital (United States); Mehron Puoris’haag M.D.,
Massachusetts General Hospital (United States); Daniel Côté, Univ. Laval Robert-Giffard
(Canada); Charles P. Lin, Massachusetts General Hospital (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We report in vivo mouse skin imaging with two-photon fluorescence microscopy by
using endogenous tryptophan as the fluorophore. With a femtosecond laser at 600
nm wavelength as the excitation source we obtain non-invasive images of skin
tissue at video-rate which provide structural information on skin components
such as epidermal cells, hair follicles, fibroblast cells. Comparing with in
vivo NADH fluorescence imaging, this new method provides epidermal cells and
fibroblasts images with better cell morphology. We also obtain images of blood
vessels and muscle cells with this method.
Generation of nanostructured surfaces by interfering and no-interfering
ultra-short pulse laser processing
Paper 7201-50 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Yoshiki Nakata, Takuya Hiromoto, Noriaki Miyanaga, Osaka Univ.
(Japan)
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Top down technology of ultra-short pulse laser processing was applied to induce
liquidly process and generate new nanostructures such as nano-waterdrop,
nanocrown, and nano-web structure. For example, a nano-waterdrop was generated
by a single shot ps laser irradiation and had the narrow dieter of about 50 nm.
In the case of nanocrown, whiskers were standing at the edge of a nanohole, and
the diameter of the whiskers was around 100 nm. In addition, nano-sized web like
structure was generated in a single shot of femtosecond laser irradiation.
Ultrafast response of negative-index metamaterials in the near infrared
Paper 7205-30 of Conference 7205
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 11:20 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): David J. Cho, Feng Wang, Xiang Zhang, Yuen-Ron Shen, Univ. of
California, Berkeley (United States); Wei Wu, Ekaterina Ponizovskaya,
Hewlett-Packard Labs. (United States); Pratik Chaturvedi, Univ. of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign (United States); Alexander M. Bratkovksy, Shih-Yuan Wang,
Hewlett-Packard Labs. (United States)
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Nanoimprint lithography is used to fabricate a metamaterial with the “fishnet”
structure composed of Ag/α-Si/Ag layers that exhibits negative refractive index
in the near-infrared. We have carried out a femtosecond pump-probe experiment to
measure the transient photo-induced response of this structure. With a pump
fluence of 330uJ/cm2 at 800 nm, the transmission at the magnetic resonance is
increased by ~15.4%. The induced change originated from carrier excitation in
the α-Si layer has a fast decay constant of 1.1ps.
The nonlinear coefficient d36 of CdSiP2
Paper 7197-21 of Conference 7197
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 2:00 PM – 2:20 PM
Author(s): Valentin P. Petrov, Frank Noack, Ivaylo Tunchev, Max-Born-Institut
für Nichtlineare Optik und Kurzzeitspektroskopie (Germany); Peter G. Schunemann,
Kevin Zawilski, BAE Systems (United States)
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The new nonlinear crystal for the mid-IR CdSiP2 was discovered only very
recently but the interest in this chalcopyrite is enormous because it possesses
most of the attractive properties of the related ZnGeP2 but allows in addition
pumping at 1064 nm without two-photon absorption and uncritical phase-matching
for 6 µm generation with maximized effective nonlinearity. We measured its
nonlinear coefficient using SHG near 4.6 µm and femtosecond pulses generated
from a seeded KNbO3 optical parametric amplifier. The result, d36( CdSiP2)
˜d36(ZnGeP2), is rather unexpected having in mind the larger band-gap of CdSiP2.
Stochastic models of exciton dynamics in a 5-μm long single air-suspended
single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT)
Paper 7201-37 of Conference 7201
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:40 PM – 5:00 PM
Author(s): Yee-fang Xiao, Tam Nhan, Mark Wilson, James Fraser, Queen's Univ.
(Canada)
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To avoid ensemble heterogeneities and environmental effects, we optically excite
and monitor a single air-suspended SWCNT (typical length 5 μm) to resolve its
fundamental optoelectronic parameters such as absorption cross section, quantum
efficiency and exciton lifetime. We assume the laser pulses stochastically
create different numbers of excitons that follow a Poissonian distribution. The
probability of having N excitons in a SWCNT decays by both linear and nonlinear
processes. We compare different models of nonlinear exciton relaxation with and
without exciton diffusion to the experimental results from the femtosecond
excitation correlation studies.
Terahertz Wave Technology and Applications
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 12:30 PM
Author(s): Xi-Cheng Zhang, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Nanoplasmonics
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Mark I. Stockman, Georgia State Univ. (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Medical multiphoton microscopic endoscopes and diagnostics
Paper 7183-3 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:20 AM – 9:45 AM
Author(s): Watt W. Webb, Hyungsik Lim, Chris Xu, Cornell Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The intrinsic tissue fluorescence and second harmonic generation (SHG) excited
by femtosecond infrared pulse trains from mode-locked lasers provides laser
scanning microscopy images of intrinsic fluorescence that are widely applied in
biophysical and biomedical research. This capability can now be adapted for
Multiphoton Microscopic imaging (MPM) of human tissue in vivo via Medical
Multiphoton Microscopic Endoscopes (M-MPM-E) designed to fit anatomical
limitations for various medical surgery specialties. The intrinsic MPM imaging
capabilities illustrate their applicability for identification and diagnostics
of malignancy. The optical design of a flexible 5mm diameter M-MPM-Endoscope
applies to internal organs, such as bladder through the urethra.
Carrier dynamics and photoexcited emission efficiency of ZnO:Zn phosphor powders
Paper 7214-4 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:24 AM – 9:52 AM
Author(s): John V. Foreman, Henry O. Everitt, U.S. Army Aviation and Missile
Research, Development and Engineering Ctr. (United States) and Duke Univ.
(United States); Jianqiu Yang, Jie Liu, Duke Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Nonstoichiometric ZnO with an excess of Zn atoms (ZnO:Zn) has a history of use
as a green/monochrome phosphor in electron-excited applications. The advent of
ultraviolet lasers and light emitting diodes presents the possibility of
photoexciting the highly efficient green emission in ZnO:Zn. Here we study
experimentally the time-integrated quantum efficiency and the photoluminescence
decays of both band edge and defect emission in ZnO:Zn nano-powders under
femtosecond pulsed excitation. A comparison of results using one-photon versus
two-photon excitation elucidates how the quantum efficiencies depend on material
properties, such as the spatial distribution of defects, and on optical effects,
such as reabsorption.
Two-photon luminescence imaging of molecularly-targeted gold nanoparticles using
a miniaturized imaging and microsurgery probe
Paper 7183-102 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Christopher L. Hoy, Nicholas J. Durr, The Univ. of Texas at Austin
(United States); Wibool Piyawattanametha, Hyejun Ra, Olav D. Solgaard, Stanford
Univ. (United States); Adela Ben-Yakar, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United
States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Two-photon luminescence (TPL) from gold nanoparticles presents a bright source
of contrast for multiphoton microscopy. To better exploit this technique
clinically, molecularly-targeted TPL imaging can be conducted through a
miniaturized two-photon microscopy probe. Furthermore, the addition of
cellular-level microsurgery capabilities presents the potential for a novel
“seek-and-treat” tool capable of diagnosing pathologies such as cancer at the
cellular level and non-thermally ablating diseased cells while leaving
neighboring cells intact. Here, we present TPL imaging of molecularly-targeted
gold nanoparticles through a miniaturized optical probe capable of two-photon
microscopy as well as femtosecond laser microsurgery.
Label-free biochemical imaging of arterial tissues using photonic crystal fiber
(PCF) based nonlinear optical microscopic system
Paper 7182-3 of Conference 7182
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:40 AM – 9:00 AM
Author(s): Alex Chun-Te Ko, Andrew Ridsdale, Adrian F. Pegoraro, Michael S. D.
Smith, Bernie J. Schattka, Mark D. Hewko, Albert Stolow, Michael G. Sowa,
National Research Council Canada (Canada)
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Nonlinear optics provides a minimally invasive optical method for fast molecular
imaging in highly scattering biological tissues at subcellular resolution.
Simultaneous elastin/collagen/lipid imaging of arterial tissues using TPEF, SHG
and CARS are achieved using a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) based laser-scanning
microscope with single femtosecond laser. This study compares the elastin/collagen
structure and lipids distribution on aortic tissue sections obtained from
coronary atherosclerosis-prone WHHL-MI rabbits sacrificed at different ages,
which mimic spontaneous myocardial infarction in humans. Arterial tissues
obtained from nitric oxide synthase knockout mice are also imaged to study the
effect of nitric oxide to hypertrophy and fibrosis of left ventricular.
Four-dimensional visualization of ultrafast nuclear motion by electron
diffraction
Paper 7214-21 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:24 AM – 9:52 AM
Author(s): Peter N. Baum, Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München (Germany) and
California Institute of Technology (United States)
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Dynamical changes in condensed matter and molecules involve motion of atoms and
electrons from initial to final conformations. To observe such rearrangements in
space and time, picometer resolution and femtosecond timing are required.
Ultrashort electron pulses, because of their short De Broglie wavelength, allow
to directly visualize atomic-scale motions in all four dimensions. Recent
results on solid-to-solid phase transformations in vanadium dioxide and
ultrafast laser ablation of graphite will be discussed, and concepts for the
generation of free attosecond electron pulses will be presented, in order to
eventually reach the time scale of electron motions with ultrafast diffraction.
Self imaging in segmented waveguide arrays
Paper 7203-17 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 10:50 AM – 11:10 AM
Author(s): Matthias Heinrich, Alexander Szameit, Felix Dreisow,
Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany); Frederic Louradour, Eric Suran, XLIM
Institut de Recherche (France); Thomas Pertsch, Stefan Nolte,
Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany); Alain Bathelemy, XLIM Institut de
Recherche (France); Andreas Tünnermann, Friedrich-Schiller-Univ. Jena (Germany)
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Self-imaging in integrated optical devices is interesting for many applications.
However, in general this relies on boundary-free light propagation, since the
interaction with the boundaries results in a considerable distortion of the
self-imaging effect. In this presentation we demonstrate the first experimental
realization of particularly segmented waveguide arrays, in which perfect
self-imaging is obtained in finite one-dimensional as well as in a
two-dimensional geometries. For the fabrication of the segmented waveguide
arrays we used the femtosecond direct-writing technique. We believe that such
segmented integrated optical devices provide a new and attractive opportunity
for image transmission even in finite systems.
Hot phonons in InN-contained heterostructure 2DEG channels
Paper 7216-7 of Conference 7216
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:25 AM
Author(s): Arvydas Matulionis, Puslaidininkiu Fizikos Institutas (Lithuania);
Hadis Morkoç, Virginia Commonwealth Univ. (United States)
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The experimental attempts in controlling the LO-phonon lifetime in a 2DEG
channel of interest for a nitride HFET will be reviewed. Since the traditional
subpicosecond pump–probe Raman scattering is very difficult to employ on a
single voltage-biased 2DEG channel, another technique, based on fluctuations,
was proposed and implemented. The pioneering results on the lifetime for AlGaN/GaN
2DEG channel were confirmed by femtosecond laser pump-probe
hot-LO-phonon-assisted intersubband far-infrared absorption experiments. The
fluctuation technique is a very convenient experimental approach to study the
phonon lifetime as a function of hot-phonon temperature in a voltage-biased 2DEG
channel. The technique in action will be illustrated on InN-contained
heterostructure 2DEG channels.
Self-channeled laser pulse induced effects at distance
Paper 7196-11 of Conference 7196
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:00 PM – 2:20 PM
Author(s): Robert Bernath, Martin C. Richardson, College of Optics &
Photonics/Univ. of Central Florida (United States)
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Studies were performed using self-channeled femtosecond laser pulses (filaments)
interacting with various materials at a distance of 30 meters. Using time
resolved optical shadowgraphy, the filament interaction with the target is
observed. Shockwaves in both the target and the surrounding atmosphere are
observed and their velocities measured. Estimations of the shockwave energy are
made from these observations. In transparent targets, optical coupling into the
target material is observed. This coupling results in optical damage lines in
the material. Results of the filament interactions will be discussed along with
supporting modeling.
Nanosecond laser-induced low-density plasmas: a new regime for nanomorphing in
bulk dielectrics
Paper 7203-25 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 3:00 PM – 3:20 PM
Author(s): Alfred Vogel, Norbert Linz, Sebastian Freidank, Joachim Noack, Univ.
zu Lübeck (Germany)
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We compared ns breakdown in water at large NA using single-longitudinal mode and
regular Nd:YAG laser pulses. For UV and VIS pulses with a smooth pulse shape
(including those from a microchip laser) we discovered a low-density plasma
regime in which nano-bubbles are created, with sizes similar to femtosecond
breakdown. 3-30 times above the bubble threshold, the plasma suddenly assumes a
larger size, luminesces brightly, and larger bubbles of 200 µm radius are
produced. Nanoeffects could not be produced with regular pulses, and at IR
wavelengths. The two-step process was successfully modeled considering thermal
ionization besides multiphoton and avalanche processes.
A new light source for multimodal multi photon microscopy including CARS
Paper 7183-39 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:20 PM – 4:35 PM
Author(s): Ingo Rimke, APE GmbH (Germany); Raluca Niesner, Max-Delbrück-Ctr. für
Molekulare Medizin Berlin-Buch (Germany); Edlef Büttner, Gero Stibenz, APE GmbH
(Germany)
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We will present a new flexible laser source for multimodal MPE microscopy
including CARS. It does consist of a tuneable femtosecond-Ti:Sapphire laser and
an optical parametric oscillator (OPO). The new OPO-design allows for high
flexibility in pump- and output wavelengths giving rise to for instance image
EGFP with the Ti:Sapphire and tdRFP with the OPO simultaneously.
The minimum energy difference between Ti:Sapphire and OPO-wavelengths achievable
is 2500cm-1. Thus CARS imaging of lipids is possible. Due to synchronous pumping
of the OPO there is no timing jitter between the pulses from the Ti:Sapphire and
OPO, absolutely necessary for the time overlap of pump and stokes pulses.
Two-photon imaging and nanoprocessing of stem cells with sub-20 fs laser pulses
Paper 7183-45 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:25 AM – 8:45 AM
Author(s): Aisada A. Uchugonova, Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik
(Germany) and Saarland Univ. (Germany); Andreas Isemann, Femtolasers Produktions
GmbH (Austria); Rainer Bückle, JenLab GmbH (Germany); Wataru Watanabe, National
Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (Japan); Karsten König,
Saarland Univ. (Germany) and JenLab GmbH (Germany)
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Novel ultracompact multiphoton sub-20 femtosecond near infrared 85 MHz laser
scanning microscopes and conventional 250 fs laser microscopes have been used to
perform high resolution multi-photon imaging of stem cell clusters as well as
targeted intracellular nanoprocessing and knock-out of living single stem cells
within an 3D microenvironment. Also lethal exposure of large parts of cell
clusters was successfully probed while maintaining single cells of interest
alive. Mean powers in the milliwatt range for 3D nanoprocessing and microwatt
powers for two-photon imaging were found to be sufficient. Ultracompact low
power sub-20 fs laser systems may become interesting tools for nanobiotechnology
such as optical cleaning of stem cell clusters and optical transfection
Plasmonic perforation of living cells using ultrashort laser pulses and gold
nanoparticles
Paper 7192-29 of Conference 7192
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:30 AM – 11:50 AM
Author(s): Markus Schomaker, Judith Baumgart, Laser Zentrum Hannover e.V.
(Germany); Hugo Murua Escobar, Univ. of Veterinary Medicine Hannover (Germany);
Jörn Bullerdiek, Univ. Bremen (Germany); Ingo Nolte, Univ. of Veterinary
Medicine Hannover (Germany); Anaclet Ngezahayo, Leibniz Univ. Hannover
(Germany); Holger Lubatschowski, Alexander Heisterkamp, Laser Zentrum Hannover
e.V. (Germany)
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If nanoparticles are illuminated with suitable laser light plasmonic resonances
can occur. Are these particles placed very close to a cell, the cell membrane
gets perforated due to the induced plasmonic effect. We investigate plasmonic
perforation of the cell membrane as an alternative technique for cell
transfection. By using weakly focussed femtosecond laser pulses, plasmonic
resonances were stimulated in 150 nm gold particles. GFSHR-17 rat cells were
successfully transfected with a GFP vector and the dependence on laser
parameters and concentrations were studied. This technique allows the
transfection of cells by opto-perforation without the need of tight focusing
conditions.
Three-dimensional photonic devices fabricated by ultrafast lasers for optical
sensing in lab-on-a-chip
Paper 7201-35 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Rebeca Martinez Vazquez, Roberto Osellame, Politecnico di Milano
(Italy); Chaitanya Dongre, Hugo J. Hoekstra, Markus Pollnau, Univ. Twente
(Netherlands); Hans H. van den Vlekkert, Lionix BV (Netherlands); Rob van
Weeghel, Zebra Bioscience B.V. (Netherlands); Paul Watts, The Univ. of Hull
(United Kingdom); Roberta Ramponi, Giulio Cerullo, Politecnico di Milano (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
A lab-on-a-chip (LOC) is a device that incorporates in a single substrate the
functionalities of a biological laboratory with micrometer dimensions. The next
technological challenge of LOCs is direct on-chip integration of photonic
functionalities. Ultrafast laser processing of the bulk of a dielectric material
is a very flexible and simple method to produce photonic devices inside
microfluidic chips for capillary electrophoresis (CE) or chemical microreactors.
In this work we report on the use of femtosecond laser pulses to fabricate
photonic devices inside commercial CE chips. The fabrication of single
waveguides intersecting the channels allows one to perform LIF sensing.
Waveguide splitters are used for multipoint sensing measurements. Finally, Mach-Zehnder
interferometers are used for label-free sensing by means of refractive index
changes detection.
Three-dimensional photonic devices fabricated by ultrafast lasers for optical
sensing in lab-on-a-chip
Paper 7203-35 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Rebeca Martinez Vazquez, Roberto Osellame, Politecnico di Milano
(Italy); Chaitanya Dongre, Hugo J. Hoekstra, Markus Pollnau, Univ. Twente
(Netherlands); Hans H. van den Vlekkert, Lionix BV (Netherlands); Rob van
Weeghel, Zebra Bioscience B.V. (Netherlands); Paul Watts, The Univ. of Hull
(United Kingdom); Roberta Ramponi, Giulio Cerullo, Politecnico di Milano (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
A lab-on-a-chip (LOC) is a device that incorporates in a single substrate the
functionalities of a biological laboratory with micrometer dimensions. The next
technological challenge of LOCs is direct on-chip integration of photonic
functionalities. Ultrafast laser processing of the bulk of a dielectric material
is a very flexible and simple method to produce photonic devices inside
microfluidic chips for capillary electrophoresis (CE) or chemical microreactors.
In this work we report on the use of femtosecond laser pulses to fabricate
photonic devices inside commercial CE chips. The fabrication of single
waveguides intersecting the channels allows one to perform LIF sensing.
Waveguide splitters are used for multipoint sensing measurements. Finally, Mach-Zehnder
interferometers are used for label-free sensing by means of refractive index
changes detection.
5D multiphoton microscopy: in-situ diagnostics for ultrafast laser 3D
nanofabrication
Paper 7201-38 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Jianzhao Li, Shane M. Eaton, Peter R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
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An ultrafast-laser optical system has been developed that combines nano-scale
machining with 5-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions + time + wavelength spectrum)
optical microscopy to enable on-the-fly diagnostic feedback for target alignment
and optimizing femtosecond laser interactions. Laser-interaction volumes were
temporally and spectrally characterized in situ during laser-formation of buried
optical waveguides in bulk glasses. Broadband photo emission is shown to
temporally follow the dynamics of thermal diffusion with a definitive onset of
prolonged heat accumulation effect above ~300 kHz repetition rate (at ~200 nJ
pulse energy) in borosilicate glass. The spectral emission is attributed to
thermally-activated photoluminescence that correlates with reduced waveguide
loss. In this way, a new means for intelligent laser processing is identified to
actively control optical waveguide quality during processing.
5D multiphoton microscopy: in-situ diagnostics for ultrafast laser 3D
nanofabrication
Paper 7203-38 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Jianzhao Li, Shane M. Eaton, Peter R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An ultrafast-laser optical system has been developed that combines nano-scale
machining with 5-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions + time + wavelength spectrum)
optical microscopy to enable on-the-fly diagnostic feedback for target alignment
and optimizing femtosecond laser interactions. Laser-interaction volumes were
temporally and spectrally characterized in situ during laser-formation of buried
optical waveguides in bulk glasses. Broadband photo emission is shown to
temporally follow the dynamics of thermal diffusion with a definitive onset of
prolonged heat accumulation effect above ~300 kHz repetition rate (at ~200 nJ
pulse energy) in borosilicate glass. The spectral emission is attributed to
thermally-activated photoluminescence that correlates with reduced waveguide
loss. In this way, a new means for intelligent laser processing is identified to
actively control optical waveguide quality during processing.
Integration of micro-optics and microfluidics in a glass chip by fs-laser for
opto-fluidic applications
Paper 7202-1 of Conference 7202
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:20 AM – 8:50 AM
Author(s): Roberto Osellame, Rebeca Martinez Vazquez, Paolo Laporta, Roberta
Ramponi, Giulio Cerullo, Politecnico di Milano (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The combination of microoptics and microfluidics, also known as optofluidics, is
raising an increasing interest. Recently, directly buried high quality
waveguides and microfluidic channels have been fabricated by femtosecond lasers.
The main advantage of this technique is its three-dimensional capability
providing high flexibility in intersecting the optical and fluidic structures.
In this work, a few optofluidic devices based on this technology will be
discussed. On one hand, the integration of an ultrafast optical switch is
demonstrated. On the other hand, the integration of optical waveguides and Mach-Zehnder
interferometers for sensing of biomolecules in a capillary electrophoresis chip
will be presented.
Time-resolved photoluminescence characterization on the two-photon pumped
stimulation emission in ZnO nanowires
Paper 7214-55 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:48 PM – 2:16 PM
Author(s): Jian Xu, Chunfeng Zhang, Fan Zhang, Ting Zhu, The Pennsylvania State
Univ. (United States)
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We report in this conference our effort to investigate the mechanism of
two-photon absorption-induced stimulation emission in ZnO nanowires.
Time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL) measurement was performed to study the
transient decays of ZnO nanowire-emission following the femtosecond pulse
excitation (τ~80fs, λ~700nm) with the fluence energy varied below and above the
threshold (160µJ/cm2), respectively. A very fast decay with lifetime 3-4 ps was
measured, suggesting by analogy with the one-photon absorption-induced process
that the faster component can be assigned to the two-photon absorption-induced
stimulated emission originating from a many-particle effect-associated
recombination mechanism.
Two-photon photocurrent spectroscopy of quantum well intersubband relaxation and
dephasing
Paper 7214-56 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 2:16 PM – 2:44 PM
Author(s): Harald Schneider, Forschungszentrum Dresden-Rossendorf e. V.
(Germany); Hui Chun Liu, National Research Council Canada (Canada); Thomas
Maier, Martin Walther, Fraunhofer-Institut für Angewandte Festkörperphysik
(Germany)
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We have studied electron intersubband relaxation and dephasing times in n-type
InGaAs/AlGaAs quantum wells by femtosecond two-photon photocurrent spectroscopy.
The approach enables us to determine systematically the dependence of these time
constants on structural parameters, including carrier density and
modulation/well doping, and to discriminate between different scattering
processes. By varying the excitation energy, we also tuned the two-photon
transition from resonant, yielding optimum resonant enhancement with a real
intermediate state, to nearly-resonant, with a virtual but resonantly enhanced
intermediate state. For autocorrelation purposes, the latter configuration
improves time resolution whilst partially retaining a resonant enhancement of
the two-photon transition strength.
Light-matter interaction processes behind intracavity mode-locking devices
Paper 7193-67 of Conference 7193
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 2:50 PM – 3:10 PM
Author(s): Narasimha S. Prasad, NASA Langley Research Ctr. (United States);
Chandra Roychoudhuri, Univ. of Connecticut (United States)
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We believe that the lasing medium runs in a single mode (frequency) at the
center of the gain medium and the intra-cavity saturable absorber or the Kerr
medium simply plays the role of fast time gating (switching). This implies that
“transform limited” “mode-locked” laser pulses, in reality, contain only a
single carrier frequency. We will present the appropriate mathematical
representation for the spectral analysis of such “mode-locked” pulses. We will
also discuss models for the physical process that give rise to the generation of
short (nanosecond class) pulses even in the absence of multiple longitudinal
modes and then use the concepts for generating shorter (picoseconds and
femtosecond) pulses.
Dynamic ultrafast laser beam tailoring for multispot photo-inscription of deep
photonic devices in bulk transparent materials
Paper 7205-37 of Conference 7205
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Cyril Mauclair, Guanghua Cheng, Nicolas Huot, Eric Audouard, Lab.
Hubert Curien (France); Arkadi Rosenfeld, Ingolf V. Hertel, Max-Born-Institut
(Germany); Razvan I. Stoian, Lab. Hubert Curien (France)
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Femtosecond laser processing in transparent media can generate localized
increase of the refractive index. Thus, by simple translation of the laser spot,
light-guiding structures are achievable in the three dimensions. We report in
the following a procedure of dynamic ultrafast laser beam tailoring for parallel
photo inscription of deep photonic devices in a-SiO2. The wave front of the beam
is controlled to achieve multi spot operation with real time adjustable
separation of the spots. The procedure involves the control of the spatial phase
of the beam with a spatial light modulator and is based on imaging of the laser
spots.
Quantitative characterization of linear and nonlinear absorption of fluorescent
proteins
Paper 7213-26 of Conference 7213
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:20 PM – 4:40 PM
Author(s): Mikhail A. Drobizhev, Shane Tillo, Nikolay S. Makarov, Thomas E.
Hughes, Aleksander K. Rebane, Montana State Univ., Bozeman (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We propose a pure optical method of evaluation of mature Fluorescent Protein
extinction coefficient by using Strickler - Berg equation, which relates
fluorescence radiative lifetime and molecular extinction coefficient. Using this
approach we evaluated fluorescence lifetimes, quantum efficiencies, and
extinction coefficients of a large number of FPs, including GFP, EGFP, CFP,
DsRed2, mRFP, tagRFP, and mFruits series.
We also obtained accurate 2PA spectra of these proteins in the broad range, 700
- 1200 nm, using our computer-controlled femtosecond 2PA spectrometer. This
information allows for quantitative comparison and selection of the one- and
two-photon brightest FP mutants at any selected wavelength.
Multifocal multimodal multiphoton photon counting imaging
Paper 7184-20 of Conference 7184
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 5:10 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Ramon Carriles, Jeffrey Field, Erich E. Hoover, Kraig E. Sheetz,
Jeffrey A. Squier, Colorado School of Mines (United States)
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We have developed a novel femtosecond laser and photon detection system that,
when coupled together, enables multifocal, multiphoton imaging through
scattering media with single element detectors for the first time. For example,
to date we have been able to image six different image areas in a single
modality (e.g., two-photon absorption fluorescence imaging, second harmonic
generation imaging, or third harmonic generation imaging) simultaneously, using
a single photomultiplier tube. Some novel features of this imaging system,
demonstrated to date include, the ability to perform multiphoton imaging at
different polarizations simultaneously, image different depths simultaneously,
and measure-bleaching rates for various excitation pulse shapes for
fluorescently labeled systems.
Self-phase-locked divide-by-2 sync-pumped optical parametric oscillator as a
broadband frequency comb source
Paper 7197-34 of Conference 7197
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 9:00 AM – 9:20 AM
Author(s): Samuel T. Wong, Tomas Plettner, Konstantin L. Vodopyanov, Robert L.
Byer, Stanford Univ. (United States)
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We demonstrate simultaneous transposing and broadening the range of a frequency
comb source by using a divide-by-2 subharmonic generator based on degenerate
synchronously-pumped femtosecond optical parametric oscillator (SPOPO). We used
a type I phase-matched PPLN crystal as a nonlinear gain element and a
mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser at 775 nm as a pump. At degeneracy (around 1550
nm), the spectrum width of our linear-cavity SPOPO was 210 cm-1, which is 2.6
times broader than that of the pump, and produced transform-limited 70-fs output
pulses. The SPOPO exhibited self-phase-locking between the signal, idler comb
modes, and the modes of the pump.
Integration of photonic crystal fibres and MEMS for nonlinear optical endoscopy
Paper 7219-14 of Conference 7219
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:30 AM
Author(s): Min Gu, Swinburne Univ. of Technology (Australia)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
In this presentation, I will give a review on our recent progress on the
development of nonlinear optical endoscopy with the integration of photonic
crystal fibres and MEMS. Endoscopy is the preeminent technique for minimally
invasive cancer diagnosis and monitoring in vivo. The combination of endoscopy
with nonlinear optical microscopy is a catalyst for the rapid point of care
application of today’s cutting edge biology by health practitioners. We present
multiphoton nonlinear tissue imaging from an endoscope probe held static with
respect to the tissue region of interest. Femtosecond pulsed excitation is
delivered within the double clad photonic crystal fibre core, through the
endoscope probe head by microelectromechanical system (MEMS) scanning mirror and
focused into the tissue sample by gradient index (GRIN) lens. The feasibility of
using a supercontinuum source from a nonlinear photonic crystal fibre will be
discussed.
Ultrafast parametric oscillators for spectroscopy
Paper 7193-84 of Conference 7193
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 1:20 PM – 1:50 PM
Author(s): Derryck T. Reid, Lukasz W. Kornaszewski, T. P. Mueller, Nicolas
Gayraud, William N. MacPherson, Duncan P. Hand, James M. Stone, Jonathan C.
Knight, Heriot-Watt Univ. (United Kingdom)
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The high spatial coherence, wide tunability and broad intrinsic bandwidth of
femtosecond optical parametric oscillators makes them uniquely attractive
sources for spectroscopy in the visible and infrared. Using systems based on
MgO:PPLN, and pumped by a self-modelocked Ti:sapphire laser, we have shown
free-space and photonic-crystal-fibre-based spectroscopy of methane to
concentrations as low as 50 ppm. New diode-pumped solid-state ultrafast lasers
are now able to exceed the performance of Ti:sapphire lasers and we will
describe performance obtained using a Yb:fibre-pumped OPO that so far has
produced 20 nJ pulses directly from the oscillator, with the potential for
energy scaling to ~1 µJ levels.
Multiphoton Microscopy (MM) - Basics, Technology Development, and Applications
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Ammasi Periasamy, Univ. of Virginia (United States); Peter T. C. So,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Multispectral multiphoton lifetime analysis of human bladder tissue
Paper 7161B-205 of Conference 7161B
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 9:50 AM – 10:10 AM
Author(s): Riccardo Cicchi, Alfonso Crisci, Gabriella Nesi, Alessandro Cosci,
Marco Carini, Francesco S. Pavone, Univ. degli Studi di Firenze (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Human tissues intrinsically contains many fluorophores that can be excited and
imaged using multiphoton microscopy. In this work we used combined two photon
intrinsic fluorescence (TPE), second harmonic generation microscopy (SHG),
fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM), and multispectral two photon
emission detection (MTPE) to investigate different kinds of human ex-vivo fresh
biopsies of bladder. Morphological and spectroscopic analyses allowed to
characterize both healthy and pathological tissue samples in a good agreement
with common routine histology. Our method is a promising tool to be used as a
diagnostic tool in a multiphoton endoscope or cystoscope.
Human bladder cancer diagnosis using multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7161B-206 of Conference 7161B
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 10:40 AM – 11:00 AM
Author(s): Sushmita Mukherjee, James S. Wysock, Casey K. Ng, Mohammed Akhtar,
Sven Perner, Ming-Ming Lee, Mark A. Rubin, Frederick R. Maxfield, Weill Cornell
Medical College (United States); Watt W. Webb, Cornell Univ. (United States);
Douglass S. Scherr, Weill Cornell Medical College (United States)
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Approximately 75% of bladder cancers present as non-muscle invasive, at which
stage they can be treated completely. However, these lesions, being small and
flat, are often hard to detect with conventional cystoscopes. These cystoscopes
also fail to assess resection margins for negativity. Thus, a Multiphoton
endoscope, with high magnification and resolution, is currently being built at
Cornell University, Ithaca. Here, we present evidence that images of diagnostic
quality can be obtained from fresh, unstained human bladder specimens (biopsies
and whole excised bladders) using a custom assembled bench-top Multiphoton
microscope. All Multiphoton diagnoses are compared with gold standard Hematoxyin/eosin
histopathology.
In vivo multiphoton tomography in skin aging studies
Paper 7161A-116 of Conference 7161A
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 2:15 PM – 2:30 PM
Author(s): Karsten König, JenLab GmbH (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Multiphoton tomography based on high resolution optical sectioning of the
epidermis and the upper dermis has been used to analyze the morphology of the
epidermal-dermal junction as well as the ratio of elastin to collagen (SAAID
index).
The signal of elastin and intracellular endogenous fluorophores was obtained by
two-photon excitation whereas collagen structures were imaged by the detection
of second harmonic generation (SHG).
The in vivo measurements on volunteers were performed with the novel multiphoton
tissue tomograph based on a compact femtosecond near infrared laser system and a
flexible scan and detector head.
Medical multiphoton microscopic endoscopes and diagnostics
Paper 7183-3 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:20 AM – 9:45 AM
Author(s): Watt W. Webb, Hyungsik Lim, Chris Xu, Cornell Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The intrinsic tissue fluorescence and second harmonic generation (SHG) excited
by femtosecond infrared pulse trains from mode-locked lasers provides laser
scanning microscopy images of intrinsic fluorescence that are widely applied in
biophysical and biomedical research. This capability can now be adapted for
Multiphoton Microscopic imaging (MPM) of human tissue in vivo via Medical
Multiphoton Microscopic Endoscopes (M-MPM-E) designed to fit anatomical
limitations for various medical surgery specialties. The intrinsic MPM imaging
capabilities illustrate their applicability for identification and diagnostics
of malignancy. The optical design of a flexible 5mm diameter M-MPM-Endoscope
applies to internal organs, such as bladder through the urethra.
Evaluating thermal damage induced by pulsed light with multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7161A-132 of Conference 7161A
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:15 AM
Author(s): Wei Gong, Yimei Huang, Hui Li, Shusen Xie, Fujian Normal Univ.
(China)
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Nonablative skin light treatment tend to be a promising method to treat
photoaged skin. Various kind of laser and irradiated parameters had been used to
implement this process. Determining the extent of thermal damage to skin has
important meanings in nonablative skin light treatment. We attempt to evaluate
the thermal damage of skin induced by pulsed light using multiphoton
fluorescence and second-harmonic-generation (SHG) microscopy. The results show
the intensity of multiphoton and SHG of thermal damaged upper dermis varied with
the irradiated light dose, and could be a potential in-vivo imaging method to
evaluate the treatment efficacy of nonablative skin light treatment.
Multiphoton fluorescence microscopy using compact femtosecond fiber laser
Paper 7203-7 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 11:20 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): Cheryl Zhan, Chulmin Joo, Siavash Yazdanfar, GE Global Research
(United States); Mikhail Berezin, Sam Achilefu, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
School of Medicine (United States)
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We developed a new MPM imaging system operating in the spectral window around
1550 nm, which features the optimal balance between scattering and absorption,
and minimized the contribution of autofluorescence. This NIR window coincides
with the primary telecommunications window, resulting in a plethora of available
light sources including compact, turnkey femtosecond fiber lasers. The
fluorescence emission is in the NIR wavelengths, which extends the penetration
depth.
We synthesized new carbocyanine NIR fluorescent probes optimized at this
particular window, and measured their two-photon fluorescence intensity and
lifetime with time-correlated single photon counting.
Multi-spectral multiphoton NDD FLIM
Paper 7183-10 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:25 PM – 1:45 PM
Author(s): Klaus Weisshart, Carl Zeiss Jena GmbH (Germany); Wolfgang Becker,
Becker & Hickl GmbH (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Research on the mechanisms of tumor genesis, Alzheimer disease, and other
metabolic disorders has resulted in an increasing demand for advanced in-vivo
imaging techniques. Multiphoton excitation with non-descanned detection (NDD) is
required to reach deep tissue layers within a live specimen. Multi-spectral
detection is needed to discriminate fluorescence from the various fluorophores
present in biological tissue. Moreover, many endogenous fluorophores appear in
different binding states or conformations with identical spectra but different
fluorescence lifetimes. Although solutions to these individual problems are
commonly available there is currently no system that allows the user to
simultaneously use multiphoton excitation, NDD detection, multi-spectral
detection, and FLIM. We have therefore developed a multi-spectral FLIM system
for the non-descanned ports of the Zeiss LSM 710 NLO and LSM 510 NLO multiphoton
microscopes. The system uses multi-dimensional TCSPC. Every photons is
characterised by its time in the pulse period of the excitation laser, its
wavelength, and its coordinates in the sample. The recording process builds up
the distribution of the photon number over these parameters. Thus, FLIM images
in up to 16 wavelength channels are obtained simultaneously and at near-ideal
efficiency. We demonstrate the capabilities of the system for autofluorescence
of tissue.
Multiphoton absorption and nonlinear optical phenomena in semiconductor
nanocrystals
Paper 7214-12 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 2:44 PM – 3:12 PM
Author(s): Gregory D. Scholes, Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Semiconductor nanocrystals (or quantum dots) are of interest because of their
size and shape tunable properties. Nonlinear optics provides a means of
examining in detail the electronic properties as well as dephasing mechanisms
characteristic of nanoscale excitons in quantum dots. The results of a number of
recent studies will be reported, including two-dimensional electronic
spectroscopic studies of CdSe nanocrystals. As one example, recent work
reporting the direct observation of a large three-photon resonance in
water-soluble ZnS quantum dots will be described.
Deep-tissue multiphoton FLIM for intravital FRET imaging
Paper 7183-117 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 5:10 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): G. Fruhwirth, Simon M. Ameer-Beg, Melanie D. Keppler, A. Brock,
King's College London (United Kingdom); Boris Vojnovic, Gray Cancer Institute
(United Kingdom); T. Ng, King's College London (United Kingdom)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Fluorescent lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) has proven to be a valuable tool
in beating the Rayleigh criterion for light microscopy by measuring Förster
resonance energy transfer (FRET) between two fluorophores. Applying multiphoton
FLIM, we previously showed in a human breast cancer cell line that recycling of
a membrane receptor-green fluorescent protein fusion is enhanced concomitantly
with the formation of a receptor:protein kinase C a complex in the endosomal
compartment [Biophys J 88 (2005), 1224]. We have extended this established
technique (FRET by FLIM, [Nat Cell Biol 9, (2006), 80 and EMBO J 22, (2003),
5390]) to probe direct protein-protein interactions also in vivo.
Therefore, we used various expressible fluorescent tags fused to membrane
receptor molecules in order to generate stable two-colour breast carcinoma cell
lines via controlled retroviral infection. We used these cell lines for
establishing a xenograft tumour model in immune-compromised Nude mice. Using
this animal model in conjunction with scanning Ti:Sapphire laser-based
two-photon excitation, we established deep-tissue multiphoton FLIM in vivo. For
the first time, this novel technique enables us to directly assess donor
fluorescence lifetime changes in vivo and we show the application of this method
for intravital imaging of direct protein-protein interactions.
Coherent control in multiphoton fluorescence imaging*
Paper 7183-83 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Arijit Kumar De, Debabrata Goswami, Indian Institute of Technology
Kanpur (India)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Multiphoton fluorescence laser-scanning microscopy has been shown to be superior
to its single-photon confocal counterpart in terms of better depth resolution.
Often the wide spectral range of the pulsed laser fails to selectively excite
fluorophores. In addition, the scarcity of fluorophores with large multiphoton
absorption cross-sections severely affects practical application. These two
drawbacks can be taken care of by ‘shaping’ the laser pulse to control molecular
fluorescence and design of novel chromophores having high absorption
cross-sections. Recent works from our group in these illuminating fields will be
addressed.
Dispersion control considerations for multiphoton and non-linear laser
microscopy applications
Paper 7183-103 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Craig Brideau, Hotchkiss Brain Institute (Canada); Sangeeta Murugkar,
Univ. of Ottawa (Canada)
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Considerable debate has recently arisen regarding the necessity for pulse
dispersion control for Multiphoton microscopy. At question is whether the degree
of improvement achieved by implementing dispersion control justifies the expense
of the extra equipment required. In this paper we will address some of the
situations under which dispersion control may or may not be desirable. For the
former case, we will consider a cost-effective design for a home-built prism
compressor system that can be constructed from off-the-shelf parts.
High-resolution adaptive wavefront correction in multiphoton microscopy*
Paper 7183-84 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Gunnsteinn Hall, Min Ren, Kevin Eliceiri, John G. White, Univ. of
Wisconsin, Madison (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
A novel approach for adaptive wavefront correction in multiphoton laser scanning
microscopy (MPLSM) is proposed. Previously, deformable mirrors have been used to
compensate for sample-induced aberrations. However, these devices generally have
a limited resolution.
We use a high-resolution liquid crystal spatial light modulator (SLM) as the
corrective device, which allows higher-order aberrations to be corrected than
can be achieved by typical deformable mirrors. A genetic algorithm determines
the optimal phase correction.
Initial results have shown that images can be obtained at greater depths using
this system. Work is in progress to optimize the system for use with living
biological specimens.
In vivo multiphoton microscopy of neuronal networks in deep cortical layers
using a microprism probe*
Paper 7183-92 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Thomas H. Chia, Michael J. Levene, Yale Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
In vivo cellular imaging of deep brain tissue is limited by its highly
light-scattering nature. We present a 1 mm microprism probe capable of imaging
multiple cortical layers simultaneously
without significant functional damage to the region of interest. The hypotenuse
of the microprism probes have a high-reflectivity coating to translate the x-,
y- raster scanning pattern of the laser to a x-, z- scanning pattern. Images
were collected with two-photon microscopy from the mouse motor, barrel, and
somatosensory cortex and show a wide field-of-view, dendritic spines from layer
V neurons, red blood cell flow, and evoked
neuronal calcium activity.
Mechanical properties of tissue determined by multiphoton microscopy*
Paper 7183-75 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Magnus B. Lilledahl, Catharina de Lange Davies, Norwegian Univ. of
Science and Technology (Norway)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The mechanical properties of tissues are in a large part related to the
structural proteins collagen and elastin. By imaging these structures one can
derieve important information regarding the mechanical properties of tissue,
which is important in many medical applications. We have studied the relation
between microscopic images of the structural proteins and macroscopic mechanical
properties. While imaging collagen with second harmonic generation and elastin
with two-photon excited fluorescence and simultaneously measuring the
macroscopic mechanical properties we gain insight into the realation between the
microscopic structure and macroscopic mechanical properties. We have conducted
experiments to investigate the relationship between these two quantities. This
information will be used to develop better mechanical models of various tissue
organs which are used in characterization of many pathological conditions.
Multiphoton autofluorescence for assessing therapeutic effects of a cox-2
inhibitor in oral carcinogensis
Paper 7183-108 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Ki K. Ho M.D., Tuya Shilagard, Suimin Qiu, Susan McCammon M.D.,
Massoud Motamedi, Vicente Resto M.D., Gracie Vargas, The Univ. of Texas Medical
Branch at Galveston (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 has been shown to be overexpressed in oral
carcinogenesis. In vivo multiphoton autofluorescence was evaluated as a
technique for noninvasively detecting effects of celecoxib, a COX-2 inhibitor,
in a hamster oral carcinogenesis model.
This longitudinal study compared microscopic morphometric parameters and
spectroscopic parameters of buccal epithelium in two groups, a DMBA treated
group given a standard diet and a DMBA group receiving a diet containing
celecoxib. Statistical analysis was performed to assess differences in the cox-2
inhibited group and the control group. Multiphoton autofluorescence revealed
microstructural changes consistent with neoplastic transformation, which were
ameliorated in the cox-2 inhibited group.
Multiphoton microscopy as a diagnostic tool for anatomopathological studies of
sentinel lymph nodes
Paper 7183-109 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Joel Lemière, Jean-Claude A. Vial, Julien Douady, François Estève,
Sylvie Lantuejoul, Philippe Lorimier, Clément Ricard, Dimitri Salameire,
Boudewijn P. J. van der Sanden, Univ. Joseph Fourier (France)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
To characterize the malignancy in patients bearing a breast or lung tumor,
anatomopathologists realize the microscopy of 3µm thin slices after an extensive
preparation of the tissues during several days. In general, only 8 slices per
“sentinel” lymph nodes are observed.We show that the anatomopathological study
with multiphoton microscopy is faster and easier than the classic technique by
imaging the porc lymph nodes with endofluorescence, with permeant dyes and with
SHG up to 80µm below the surface. We also image 3 µm slices of human lymph nodes
bearing metastatic melanoma cells showing good contrasts between tumor and
healthy tissues.
Multiphoton microscopy of near infrared dyes
Paper 7183-110 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Siavash Yazdanfar, Chun Zhan, Chulmin Joo, GE Global Research (United
States); Mikhail Berezin, Samuel Achilefu, Washington Univ. in St. Louis School
of Medicine (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We describe multiphoton microscopy using a compact, turnkey femtosecond fiber to
excite a new class of near infrared carbocyanine dyes. This system offers
advantages in penetration depth, contrast, and simplicity as compared to
conventional multiphoton microscopy.
Non-linear effects and role of scattering in multiphoton imaging of thick
biological samples*
Paper 7183-74 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Francesca Cella, Zeno Lavagnino, Alberto Diaspro, Univ. degli Studi
di Genova (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
While performing imaging of biological scattering tissues in non linear
excitation regime, the localization of the maximum 2PE intensity was found to
shift closer to the surface and the 2PE imaging depth limit appears strongly
limited by near surface fluorescence. In this work we computed the illumination
and the photobleaching distribution in order to characterize the effects induced
by scattering. Simulations have been performed for different scattering and an
experimental test has been carried out by imaging thick scattering fluorescent
immobile samples. Results confirm that under certain conditions no
photobleaching effects due to scattering occur close to the surface.
Optimization of fluorescence collection in multiphoton microscopy*
Paper 7183-91 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Joseph Zinter, Michael J. Levene, Yale Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Efficient fluorescence collection is critically important to maximize image
quality and depth in multiphoton microscopy. Here we present an optimized, large
aperture fluorescence collection system for use with the Olympus 20 X 0.95NA
objective and two Hamamatsu H7422P-40 GaAsP photomultiplier tubes. Using Zemax
optical design software to model the fluorescence intensity distribution and
collection geometry, we have designed and constructed an optimized, large
aperture detector housing assembly, which provides a significant increase in
collected fluorescent signal, image quality, and maximum imaging depth.
Evaluation of diseases in vivo with coherent Raman and multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-23 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:20 AM – 9:45 AM
Author(s): Erik Bélanger, Steve Begin, Sophie Laffray, Stephane Pages, Univ.
Laval Robert-Giffard (Canada); Réal Vallée, Univ. Laval (Canada); Yves De
Koninck, Daniel Côté, Univ. Laval Robert-Giffard (Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We are studying multiple sclerosis with an animal model called experimental
auto-immune encephalomyelitis (EAE). After surgically exposing the spinal cord,
we characterize the amount of demyelination using the CARS modality and use
reflectance and fluorescence imaging to study the dynamics of axons and other
glial cells. We describe the animal model as well as the critical steps to
enable live animal imaging (video-rate microscopy, image stabilization). We show
a complete characterization of the polarization dependence of the CARS signal in
fresh spinal cord tissue, and discuss the resulting non uniformities of the
image intensities including a solution based on circular polarizations. Finally,
the use of CARS spectroscopy for diagnosis will be discussed.
Coupling CARS with multiphoton fluorescence and harmonic generation on the same
platform
Paper 7183-40 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:35 PM – 4:50 PM
Author(s): Hongtao Chen, Haifeng Wang, Jiabin Zhu, Kimberly Buhman, Ji-Xin Cheng
D.V.M., Purdue Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We present an approach to add the coherent anti-stokes Raman scattering (CARS)
imaging modality to a multiphoton microscope. A MaiTai laser and an optical
parametric oscillator (OPO) provide the excitation beams. The frequency-doubled
idler beam is combined with the MaiTai beam for CARS imaging. The MaiTai beam
and the signal beam from OPO are also used for multiphoton fluorescence and
second/third harmonic generation imaging, respectively. Internal spectral
detectors are employed for microspectroscopy analysis. This system enables
multimodal NLO imaging of various components in a biological tissue.
Enhancement of multiphoton excitation-induced photoacoustic signals by using
gold nanoparticles surrounded by fluorescent dyes
Paper 7177-83 of Conference 7177
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM
Author(s): Yoshihisa Yamaoka, Tetsuro Takamatsu, Kyoto Prefectural Univ. of
Medicine (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Recently, we have developed multiphoton excitation-induced photoacoustic imaging
employing a 1064-nm nanosecond pulsed laser to improve the depth penetration in
living tissues. Because the generation of photoacoustic signal induced by
multiphoton excitation is less efficient than that by one-photon excitation, it
is important to enhance selectively only the signal induced by multiphoton
excitation. In this study, we demonstrated the enhancement of multiphoton-photoacoustic
signal by using gold nanoparticles surrounded by fluorescent dyes as contrast
agents. This enhancement is effected by the wavelength selectivity of
fluorescent dyes and the thermal characteristics of gold nanoparticles.
In vivo multiphoton tomography using a high NA GRIN microendoscope
Paper 7183-44 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 8:25 AM
Author(s): Karsten König, JenLab GmbH (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Multiphoton tomographs based on femtosecond laser and GRIN lens technology in
combination with flexible scan heads have been developed for clinical
high-resolution tissue imaging and small animal research. The novel multiphoton
tissue tomograph possesses an articulated mirror arm in combination with a
flexible scan head which includes galvoscanner, a piezodriven focusing optics
and a PMT photodetector as well as a rigid GRIN microendoscope. 250 MHz fiber
based femtosecond lasers as well as 80 MHz tunable Ti:Sa lasers have been tested
as source for two-photon SHG , autofluorescence, and FLIM imaging
Multiphoton ionization and attosecond science inside transparent dielectrics
Paper 7214-35 of Conference 7214
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:20 AM – 11:00 AM
Author(s): Paul B. Corkum, National Research Council Canada (Canada) and Univ.
of Ottawa (Canada); Marina Gertsvolf, D. Grojo, National Research Council Canada
(Canada); S. Golin, Univ. of Ottawa (Canada); S. Lei, Kansas State Univ. (United
States); David M. Rayner, National Research Council Canada (Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Attosecond processes, similar to those that arise in atomic and molecular gases,
must occur in large band-gap dielectrics and in dense gases. However, to observe
them we need to develop diagnostic methods that are appropriate for solids.
Since even intense short pulses contain very few photons, one approach is to
study beam depletion. We discuss how this may lead to attosecond time resolution
inside dielectrics...
New developments of systems for multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-55 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:15 AM
Author(s): Eva Simbuerger, Carl Zeiss Jena GmbH (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Multiphoton Microscopy has established itself as a widely used technique in
biomedical imaging. The original technological hurdles have long been overcome
and easy-to-use software-controlled systems have become standard. Future
challenges include the adaptation of these systems to a variety of more
sophisticated applications using specialized optics coatings or different types
of detectors. Technical innovations are directed towards such diverse
applications as second harmonic generation, spectral imaging or manipulation
with high laser power.
Investigating new sources of femtosecond fiber lasers in multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-56 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:15 AM – 11:30 AM
Author(s): Shuo Tang, Univ. of British Columbia (Canada) and Univ. of
California, Irvine (United States); Jian Liu, PolarOnyx, Inc. (United States);
Zhongping Chen, Bruce J. Tromberg, Univ. of California, Irvine (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Femtosecond fiber lasers have emerged as a promising light source for MPM
applications. The laser system is reliable, compact, low-cost, and portable
because it uses mostly fiber connected components from telecommunications. We
have implemented compact, all-fiber based femtosecond fiber lasers in
multiphoton imaging at the wavelength bands of 1030 nm and 1560 nm. Intrinsic
second-harmonic generation signal is excited from rat tail tendon and human skin
samples. Two-photon excited fluorescence images are obtained from tissues
stained with exogenous fluorophores. Our results show that the femtosecond fiber
lasers have the great potential of applications in developing all-fiber based,
portable multiphoton endoscopes.
Adaptive optics for multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-49 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:30 AM – 11:45 AM
Author(s): Martin J. Booth, Delphine Debarre, Kate Grieve, Tony Wilson, Univ. of
Oxford (United Kingdom)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Specimen-induced aberrations are frequently encountered in high resolution
microscopy, particularly when high numerical aperture lenses are used to image
deep into biological specimens. These aberrations distort the focal spot causing
a reduction in resolution and, often more importantly, reduced signal level and
contrast. This is particularly problematic in multiphoton microscopy, where the
non-linear nature of the signal generation process means that the signal level
is strongly affected by changes in the focal spot intensity. We have applied the
techniques of adaptive optics to correct aberrations in two-photon fluorescence
and harmonic generation microscopes, restoring image quality.
Multiphoton microscopy by multiexcitonic ladder climbing in colloidal quantum
dots
Paper 7183-50 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:45 AM – 12:00 PM
Author(s): Dan Oron, Nir R. Ben Haim, Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Depth resolved multiphoton microscopy is performed by collecting the fluorescent
emission of two-exciton (BX) states in colloidal quantum dots, formed via two
sequential resonant absorption events. Due to the large absorption cross-section
and the long intermediate state lifetime, unprecedented low excitation energy
and peak powers are required to generate this nonlinear response, and the
effective two-photon cross section can be as large as ~10^10 GM. The depth
resolution of our microscope is shown to be equivalent to a standard two-photon
microscope. The system also shows slow saturation due to the contribution of
higher excited states to the emitted signal.
Fabrication of tailored photonic crystals using multiphoton lithography
Paper 7223-8 of Conference 7223
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 3:30 PM – 4:00 PM
Author(s): Joseph W. Perry, Georgia Institute of Technology (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
5D multiphoton microscopy: in-situ diagnostics for ultrafast laser 3D
nanofabrication
Paper 7201-38 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Jianzhao Li, Shane M. Eaton, Peter R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An ultrafast-laser optical system has been developed that combines nano-scale
machining with 5-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions + time + wavelength spectrum)
optical microscopy to enable on-the-fly diagnostic feedback for target alignment
and optimizing femtosecond laser interactions. Laser-interaction volumes were
temporally and spectrally characterized in situ during laser-formation of buried
optical waveguides in bulk glasses. Broadband photo emission is shown to
temporally follow the dynamics of thermal diffusion with a definitive onset of
prolonged heat accumulation effect above ~300 kHz repetition rate (at ~200 nJ
pulse energy) in borosilicate glass. The spectral emission is attributed to
thermally-activated photoluminescence that correlates with reduced waveguide
loss. In this way, a new means for intelligent laser processing is identified to
actively control optical waveguide quality during processing.
5D multiphoton microscopy: in-situ diagnostics for ultrafast laser 3D
nanofabrication
Paper 7203-38 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Jianzhao Li, Shane M. Eaton, Peter R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An ultrafast-laser optical system has been developed that combines nano-scale
machining with 5-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions + time + wavelength spectrum)
optical microscopy to enable on-the-fly diagnostic feedback for target alignment
and optimizing femtosecond laser interactions. Laser-interaction volumes were
temporally and spectrally characterized in situ during laser-formation of buried
optical waveguides in bulk glasses. Broadband photo emission is shown to
temporally follow the dynamics of thermal diffusion with a definitive onset of
prolonged heat accumulation effect above ~300 kHz repetition rate (at ~200 nJ
pulse energy) in borosilicate glass. The spectral emission is attributed to
thermally-activated photoluminescence that correlates with reduced waveguide
loss. In this way, a new means for intelligent laser processing is identified to
actively control optical waveguide quality during processing.
Multimodal multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-65 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:25 PM
Author(s): François Légaré, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique
(Canada); Christian P. Pfeffer M.D., Harvard Medical School (United States);
Feruz S. Ganikhanov, West Virginia Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Multiphoton microscopy is a powerful technique for high spatial resolution thick
tissue imaging. In its simple version, it uses fluorescence. However, not every
biological structure is inherently fluorescent or can be stained without causing
biochemical changes. To circumvent these limitations, other approaches are
currently being developed and investigated with regard to different
applications. These techniques are: (1) SHG, (2) THG, and (3) CARS microscopy.
The main advantage of the above mentioned techniques is that they derive their
imaging contrast from optical nonlinearities that do not involve fluorescence
process. As a particular application of SHG-THG-CARS multimodal microscopy, we
investigated collagen arrays.
Development of a tool for nanostructuring and multiphoton imaging with nanojoule
femtosecond laser pulses
Paper 7201-2 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): David Bruneel, Martin Schwarz, Fraunhofer-Institut für
Biomedizinische Technik (Germany); Eric Audouard, Lab. Hubert Curien (France);
Ronan Le Harzic, Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An integrated tool combining control and diagnostic for nanoprocessing of
bio-compatible and biological materials and also allowing multiphoton large area
laser scanner microscopy has been developped. This multi-function compact device
is of prime interest and can be considered as a novel tool for nanoprocessing in
material science, nanobiotechnology, nanomedicine. Applications in biomedicine
include, for example, optoporation, cells nanodrilling, nanocutting transfection
of cells, deactivation of cell organelles or investigation of cell dynamics but
also potentially useful in material science for the manufacture of waveguides,
gratings, micro fluidic devices, nanocontainers, data storage, nanolithography,
nanomarking,…
A Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor-based adaptive optics system for multiphoton
microscopy
Paper 7209-1 of Conference 7209
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:00 PM – 1:30 PM
Author(s): Peter T. So, Jae Won Cha, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(United States); Jérôme Ballesta, Imagine Optic (France)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Two-photon excitation fluorescence microscopy has found many deep tissue imaging
applications. The imaging depth of biological sample is partly limited by
refractive index inhomogeneity in specimen. Because of this inhomogeneity, the
wavefront of the excitation beam is distorted. Due to the distorted wavefront of
the excitation beam, point spread function is broadened at the focal point and
this leads to degraded resolution and lower signal level. For the correction of
the distorted wavefront, we measure the distorted wavefront using a
Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor with the reflected light confocal detection and
compensate the wavefront distortion using a deformable mirror.
Pulse-duration management of visible wavelength lasers for multiphoton
photolysis applications
Paper 7193-64 of Conference 7193
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:50 PM – 2:10 PM
Author(s): Kyle S. Gardner, Univ. of Strathclyde (United Kingdom); D. Ogden,
Univ. Paris 5 (France); Erling Riis, Gail McConnell, Univ. of Strathclyde
(United Kingdom)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
As multi-photon excitation applications continue to diversify, laser technology
must be developed to meet the growing demands. One-such example is multi-photon
photolysis, where a laser “uncages” active molecules to instigate a localised
chemical interaction. Caged compounds are typically photolysed with light
~300nm, hence two-photon uncaging requires an ultrashort-pulsed source
~600-650 nm.
We report a frequency-doubled fs-pulsed Cr:Fosterite laser with pulse tailoring
options, suitable for multi-photon photolysis. We will report the application of
this source in multi-photon photolysis of caged glutamate, with an overview of
the critical laser parameters required for efficient photo-chemical release.
Molecular design for multiphoton absorption: from the visible to
telecommunications wavelengths
Paper 7213-24 of Conference 7213
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 3:30 PM – 4:00 PM
Author(s): Chantal Andraud, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon (France)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Multifocal multimodal multiphoton photon counting imaging
Paper 7184-20 of Conference 7184
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 5:10 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Ramon Carriles, Jeffrey Field, Erich E. Hoover, Kraig E. Sheetz,
Jeffrey A. Squier, Colorado School of Mines (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We have developed a novel femtosecond laser and photon detection system that,
when coupled together, enables multifocal, multiphoton imaging through
scattering media with single element detectors for the first time. For example,
to date we have been able to image six different image areas in a single
modality (e.g., two-photon absorption fluorescence imaging, second harmonic
generation imaging, or third harmonic generation imaging) simultaneously, using
a single photomultiplier tube. Some novel features of this imaging system,
demonstrated to date include, the ability to perform multiphoton imaging at
different polarizations simultaneously, image different depths simultaneously,
and measure-bleaching rates for various excitation pulse shapes for
fluorescently labeled systems.
Arbitrary two-dimensional multiphoton excitation patterns with temporally
focused digital holograms
Paper 7184-26 of Conference 7184
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 9:50 AM
Author(s): Dan Oron, Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel); Valentina Emiliani,
Eirini I. Papagiakoumou, Vincent de-Sars, René Descartes Univ. (France)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
A combination of temporal focusing of ultrashort pulses with digital holography
is introduced. This enables us to generate arbitrary depth-resolved
two-dimensional multiphoton excitation patterns completely without scanning. The
depth resolution is shown to be nearly independent of the details of the
illumination pattern, and is comparable to that of line-scanning multiphoton
excitation. This scheme is of particular importance in applications requiring
uniform excitation of large areas over short time scales, such as neuronal
activation by multiphoton uncaging of neurotransmitters.
Ultrashort phase-shaped pulses for biomedical imaging
Paper 7183-32 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:25 PM – 1:50 PM
Author(s): Marcos M. Dantus, Michigan State Univ. (United States) and
BioPhotonic Solutions, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The development of MIIPS (multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan) has
virtually eliminated the difficulties associated with characterization of
ultrashort laser pulses and elimination of phase distortions and has allowed us
to explore the use of sub-10 fs pulse for multiphoton microscopy as well as for
other forms of nonlinear optical microscopy. This presentation will include some
of our latest work on nonlinear optical imaging, selective nonlinear excitation,
deep tissue imaging, and mass resolved ion imaging.
Atmospheric pressure femtosecond laser imaging mass spectrometry
Paper 7182-68 of Conference 7182
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM
Author(s): Yves Coello, Tissa C. Gunaratne, Marcos M. Dantus, Michigan State
Univ. (United States)
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We present a novel atmospheric pressure femtosecond laser imaging mass
spectrometry system able to ionize and fragment molecules regardless of their
size via direct multiphoton excitation, without the need for a sample matrix.
Our uses amplified femtosecond laser pulses and is able to deliver
transform-limited (TL) 30fs focused pulses to the sample thanks to a multiphoton
intrapulse interference phase scan (MIIPS) pulse shaper that characterizes and
corrects the spectral phase distortions of the pulses, ensuring efficient and
reproducible ionization within the focal volume. Various samples including
biological tissue have been imaged with 10 um resolution using this approach.
Doppler optical frequency domain imaging of tumor angiogenesis
Paper 7168-59 of Conference 7168
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 10:30 AM – 10:45 AM
Author(s): Benjamin J. Vakoc, William W. Oh, Adrien E. Desjardins, Lisa A.
Bartlett, Guillermo J. Tearney, Brett E. Bouma, Wellman Ctr. for Photomedicine
(United States); Ryan M. Lanning, Timothy Padera, Dai Fukumura M.D., Rakesh K.
Jain, Edwin L. Steele Lab. (United States)
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In combination with advanced animal models, optical microscopies such as
fluorescence confocal and multiphoton microscopy provide a powerful set of tools
for studying the complex pathophysiology of cancer. In this talk, we will
describe our efforts to develop new coherence-based microscopic techniques to
compliment these fluorescence microscopies for this biological application. We
will describe in detail the design and construction of a Doppler optical
frequency domain imaging system capable of rapid, wide-field imaging of vascular
networks and tumor volumes in three-dimensions, and quantitatively compare the
capabilities and limitations of this instrument relative to multiphoton
techniques.
Spectroscopic characterization of extracted and in situ collagen and elastin
based on multiphoton excitation microscopy and spectroscopy
Paper 7161A-103 of Conference 7161A
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 9:00 AM – 9:15 AM
Author(s): Jianxin Chen, Anthony Lee, Jianhua Zhao, Hequn Wang, The BC Cancer
Research Ctr. (Canada); Harvey Lui, David I. McLean, Univ. of British Columbia
(Canada); Haishan Zeng, The BC Cancer Research Ctr. (Canada)
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We present the spectroscopic characterization of collagen and elastin extracted
from human skin dermis as well as collagen and elastin in situ within excised
human skin using multiphoton excitation microscopy (MPM) and spectroscopy. We
found good agreements on some aspects of the spectral properties of extracted
collagen and elastin samples versus that of collagen and elastin in situ.
However, there also appear to be discrepancies in other aspects of the spectral
properties. For collagen second harmonic generation, there is an optimal
excitation wavelength ranging from 790-nm to 850-nm. These findings will provide
guidance for in vivo skin applications of MPM.
High throughput imaging based on non-descanning multifocal multiphoton
microscopy using a large field of view objective
Paper 7183-105 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Jae Won Cha, Peter T. C. So, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(United States)
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Multifocal multiphoton microscope (MMM) is a promising platform for high
throughput, high content tissue cytometry. However, its de-scanned emission
light path geometry contributes to 30~60% signal loss. In this report, we
consider the implementation of multi-anode PMT based MMM using non-descanning
geometry to improve the emission signal collection efficiency. Additional
crosstalk between pixels may be compensated by maximum likelihood estimation.
Finally, the efficiency of the tissue image cytometer can be further improved by
designing a custom large field of view, high NA objective based on improving a
simple objective lens design with adaptive optics compensation.
Ultra-compact (palm-top size), low-cost, maintenance-free (>3000 h),
1.5-kW-peak-power diode-pumped femtosecond solid-state laser source for
multiphoton microscopy
Paper 7183-114 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Shogo Yamazoe, Tadashi Kasamatsu, FUJIFILM Advanced Research Labs.
(Japan)
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We demonstrate a novel practical femtosecond laser source, which is, to our
knowledge, the smallest size and potentially low cost. The innovation is the
simple linear-cavity design utilizing soliton mode-locking induced by precise
group velocity dispersion control. Average output power of 680 mW and pulse
width of 162 fs were obtained at around 1045 nm from a 980-nm diode-pumped
Yb3+:KY(WO4)2 laser. The pulse repetition rate was 2.8 GHz, leading to a pulse
peak power of 1.5 kW, which is sufficient for biomedical imaging. The laser
module including the laser diode pump system has a footprint of only 8×4 cm2.
Stable operation of 3000 hours was demonstrated with fluctuation of less than
10%.
Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy*
Paper 7183-43 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Wei Min, Christian W. Freudiger, Sijia Lu, Sunney Xie, Harvard Univ.
(United States)
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We have developed a new multiphoton microscopy based on stimulated Raman
scattering. It allows label-free chemical-selective imaging with pure
vibrational spectral specificity, high sensitivity, high spatial resolution,
noninvasiveness, and three-dimensional sectioning capability.
Engineered nanostructures exhibiting enhanced optical nonlinearity
Paper 7224-19 of Conference 7224
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 2:00 PM
Author(s): Mary J. Potasek, SimPhoTek, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Nanostructures of semiconductor quantum dots capped with surfactants and
embedded in organic thin films exhibit several orders of magnitude increase in
their multiphoton cross-sections of absorption relative to semiconductor quantum
dots capped with surfactants in solution or in other matrix materials. Large
values of optical nonlinearity have been measured for CdS and CdSe quantum dots
in these engineered nanostructures. We will discuss these findings within the
context of theoretically proposed hybrid excitons in organic-inorganic
nanostructures. Optical nonlinear materials are valuable for applications in
biomedicine, optical data storage, and telecommunications.
New developments in ultrafast lasers for non-linear imaging
Paper 7183-54 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:45 AM – 11:00 AM
Author(s): Marco F. Arrigoni, Coherent, Inc. (United States)
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Multiphoton microscopy has driven in recent years development of specialized
ultrafast laser sources with pulse duration, tuning range and power tailored to
provide optimum images. More recent trends in non-linear optics microscopy
include multimodal imaging (CARS, OCT, MPE and harmonic microscopy), use of
longer wavelengths and preconditioning of the laser beam parameters to better
match the optical chain and obtain better, deeper images of the live sample. In
this presentation I will describe recent advances in lasers sources that provide
extended tuning range, pulse conditioning and other user-benefits.
Non linear manipulation and imaging of neural networks
Paper 7183-57 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 1:50 PM
Author(s): Francesco S. Pavone, Univ. degli Studi di Firenze (Italy)
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We have used multiphoton absorption as a tool for the selective lesions on the
neuronal processes of cortical neurons in living mice expressing fluorescent
proteins. The spatial precision of this method is demonstrated by ablating
individual dendritic spines, while sparing the adjacent spines and the
structural integrity of the dendrite. Furthermore, we combined the advantages of
second-harmonic generation (SHG) with a random access (RA) excitation scheme to
realize a new microscope (RASH microscopy) used to simultaneously record
electrical activity from clusters of Purkinje cells (PCs) in acute cerebellar
slices.
Broad tunability of the nonlinear properties of doped quantum dots and of
core-doped quantum dot heterostructures
Paper 7189-5 of Conference 7189
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 10:00 AM – 10:20 AM
Author(s): Dan Oron, Assaf Avidan, Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel)
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We present an experimental study of exciton-exciton interactions in doped
colloidal quantum dots, focusing on systems where only the holes are localized
by the dopant, a system analogous to type-II quantum dot heterostructures. This
system can be induced to exhibit very strong exciton-exciton repulsion, up to
about 300meV, leading to nearly complete removal of the spectral overlap of the
inhomogeneously broadened exciton and biexciton emission. The dependence of
exciton-exciton repulsion on host size and on the composition of core-doped
quantum dot heterostructures is discussed. Finally, we present new schemes for
multiphoton microscopy utilizing the unique properties of these quantum dots.
Two-photon luminescence imaging of molecularly-targeted gold nanoparticles using
a miniaturized imaging and microsurgery probe
Paper 7183-102 of Conference 7183
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Christopher L. Hoy, Nicholas J. Durr, The Univ. of Texas at Austin
(United States); Wibool Piyawattanametha, Hyejun Ra, Olav D. Solgaard, Stanford
Univ. (United States); Adela Ben-Yakar, The Univ. of Texas at Austin (United
States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Two-photon luminescence (TPL) from gold nanoparticles presents a bright source
of contrast for multiphoton microscopy. To better exploit this technique
clinically, molecularly-targeted TPL imaging can be conducted through a
miniaturized two-photon microscopy probe. Furthermore, the addition of
cellular-level microsurgery capabilities presents the potential for a novel
“seek-and-treat” tool capable of diagnosing pathologies such as cancer at the
cellular level and non-thermally ablating diseased cells while leaving
neighboring cells intact. Here, we present TPL imaging of molecularly-targeted
gold nanoparticles through a miniaturized optical probe capable of two-photon
microscopy as well as femtosecond laser microsurgery.
Nanosecond laser-induced low-density plasmas: a new regime for nanomorphing in
bulk dielectrics
Paper 7203-25 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 3:00 PM – 3:20 PM
Author(s): Alfred Vogel, Norbert Linz, Sebastian Freidank, Joachim Noack, Univ.
zu Lübeck (Germany)
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We compared ns breakdown in water at large NA using single-longitudinal mode and
regular Nd:YAG laser pulses. For UV and VIS pulses with a smooth pulse shape
(including those from a microchip laser) we discovered a low-density plasma
regime in which nano-bubbles are created, with sizes similar to femtosecond
breakdown. 3-30 times above the bubble threshold, the plasma suddenly assumes a
larger size, luminesces brightly, and larger bubbles of 200 µm radius are
produced. Nanoeffects could not be produced with regular pulses, and at IR
wavelengths. The two-step process was successfully modeled considering thermal
ionization besides multiphoton and avalanche processes.
When shorter is better
Paper 7203-31 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM – 5:50 PM
Author(s): Marcos M. Dantus, Michigan State Univ. (United States) and
BioPhotonic Solutions Inc. (United States)
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Ultrafast lasers have opened a whole range of applications due to their high
peak intensity. Unfortunately, they are sensitive to the environment and the
pulses are easily broadened. This talk will focus on how the MIIPS (multiphoton
intrapulse interference phase scan) technology is being use to deliver to the
target transform limited pulses with pulse durations as short as 4.6 fs. The
performance of more than 16 different commercial lasers using MIIPS will be
demonstrated. Micromachining results will be used to illustrate advantages from
consistent delivery of ultrafast pulses through complex focusing optics.
Two-photon imaging and nanoprocessing of stem cells with sub-20 fs laser pulses
Paper 7183-45 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:25 AM – 8:45 AM
Author(s): Aisada A. Uchugonova, Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik
(Germany) and Saarland Univ. (Germany); Andreas Isemann, Femtolasers Produktions
GmbH (Austria); Rainer Bückle, JenLab GmbH (Germany); Wataru Watanabe, National
Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (Japan); Karsten König,
Saarland Univ. (Germany) and JenLab GmbH (Germany)
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Novel ultracompact multiphoton sub-20 femtosecond near infrared 85 MHz laser
scanning microscopes and conventional 250 fs laser microscopes have been used to
perform high resolution multi-photon imaging of stem cell clusters as well as
targeted intracellular nanoprocessing and knock-out of living single stem cells
within an 3D microenvironment. Also lethal exposure of large parts of cell
clusters was successfully probed while maintaining single cells of interest
alive. Mean powers in the milliwatt range for 3D nanoprocessing and microwatt
powers for two-photon imaging were found to be sufficient. Ultracompact low
power sub-20 fs laser systems may become interesting tools for nanobiotechnology
such as optical cleaning of stem cell clusters and optical transfection
Latest advances in ultra-fast laser sources for multi photon microscopy
Paper 7183-53 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:30 AM – 10:45 AM
Author(s): Philip G. Smith, Newport Spectra-Physics (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The advent of compact, fully automated, and widely wavelength-tunable ultrafast
oscillators has triggered an explosive growth in their use in a broad array of
multiphoton imaging techniques. Over the past decade laser manufacturers have
constantly improved the performance characteristics of these sources to meet the
requirements of the user community. We will review the latest advances at
Newport / Spectra-Physics in this field and discuss new ways of optimizing key
parameters for efficient deep-tissue fluorescence generation, including
turn-key, automated second order dispersion compensation that allows for
optimization of the pulse width at the sample over a wide wavelength range,
without compromising beam pointing and other critical beam parameters.
1230nm-based least-invasive third and second harmonic generation imaging of
ocular tissues
Paper 7183-61 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 2:55 PM
Author(s): Szu-Yu Chen, Chi-Kuang Sun, National Taiwan Univ. (Taiwan); Han-Chieh
Yu, I-Jong Wang, National Taiwan Univ. Hospital (Taiwan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Cornea functions as an outermost lens and plays an important role in vision. For
cornea diagnosis and treatment such as refractive surgery, a microscopic imaging
system with cellular resolution and eye safety is strongly desired. Recently,
confocal and multiphoton microscopy have been applied to clinical applications
with visible to near-infrared light sources. To increase the eye safety, a light
source with longer wavelength would be needed. In this presentation, an
infrared-based based harmonic generation microscopy study of mouse eyes is
demonstrated, since most of auto-fluorescence was suppressed under IR
excitation, with ~700m penetrability achieved.
Nonlinear microscopic properties of starch granules
Paper 7183-62 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:55 PM – 3:10 PM
Author(s): Richard Cisek, Nicole Prent, Univ. of Toronto at Mississauga
(Canada); Arkady Major, Univ. of Manitoba (Canada); Virginijus Barzda, Univ. of
Toronto at Mississauga (Canada)
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Systematic investigation of nonlinear optical properties of individual starch
granules has been performed with a multicontrast multiphoton excitation
fluorescence, second harmonic generation (SHG) and third harmonic generation (THG)
microscope. The SHG image of a starch granule visualizes the orientation of the
linear polarization of the laser, or reveals the circular polarization. The SHG
cancels in the center of starch granule due to the centrosymmetric organization.
The forward and backward radiation of SHG reveals different intensity
distribution within starch. Large variation in morphology of the granules
reveals different structural organization of starch. The harmonic microscopy is
beneficial for studying starch in vivo, as well as for food quality control and
optimization of biofuel production.
Integration of photonic crystal fibres and MEMS for nonlinear optical endoscopy
Paper 7219-14 of Conference 7219
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:30 AM
Author(s): Min Gu, Swinburne Univ. of Technology (Australia)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Excitonic effects on optically induced ultrafast currents in GaAs quantum wells
Paper 7214-3 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 8:56 AM – 9:24 AM
Author(s): Mark Bieler, Shekhar Priyadarshi, Klaus Pierz, Uwe Siegner,
Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (Germany); Philip Dawson, The Univ. of
Manchester (United Kingdom)
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We have studied the influence of excitonic effects on two different types of
ultrafast current transients that are induced in unbiased semiconductor
structures by all-optical excitation. While injection currents result from
quantum interference between different absorption pathways, shift currents are
generated by the spatial shift of the center of the electron charge during
optical excitation. Our experimental results show that Coulomb effects
substantially affect the properties of shift and injection currents.
Modeling the nanoplasmonics-enhanced ultrafast laser interaction on biological
tissue
Paper 7203-2 of Conference 7203
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:00 AM – 9:20 AM
Author(s): Etienne Boulais, Guillaume Poulin, Michel Meunier, Ecole
Polytechnique de Montréal (Canada)
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Student paper for competition
Interest in hyperthermia therapy for tumor destruction is stimulated by recent
advances in plasmonic nanostructures synthesis. Structures such nanorods exhibit
plasmon resonance in the near infrared portion of the spectrum, enabling
treatment in deep tissues. However, there is a lack of a quantitative
description of the temperature profile induced in the tumor and its surrounding
by the process. In the present study, 3D electromagnetic field distribution and
tissue transient temperature distribution is calculated for embedded
nanoplasmonic structures after an interaction with an ultrafast laser pulse.
Temperature profile induced in the tissue is then calculated for different laser
pulse fluences.
Imaging carrier and phonon transport in Si using ultrafast optical pulses
Paper 7214-5 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 10:15 AM – 10:43 AM
Author(s): David H. Hurley, Idaho National Lab. (United States); Oliver B.
Wright, Osamu Matsuda, Hokkaido Univ. (Japan); Brian McCandless, Univ. of
Delaware (United States)
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We microscopically image thermal diffusion and surface acoustic phonon
propagation within a single crystallite of a polycrystalline Si sample. The
experimental approach employs ultrafast optical pulses to generate an
electron-hole plasma and a second probe pulse is used to image the evolution of
the plasma. By decomposing the signal into a component that vary with delay time
and a steady state component that varies with pump modulation frequency, the
respective influence of carrier recombination and thermal diffusion are
identified. Additionally, the coherent surface acoustic phonon component to the
signal is imaged using a Sagnac interferometer to monitor optical phase.
Ultrafast far-infrared optics of carbon nanotubes
Paper 7214-9 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:20 PM – 1:48 PM
Author(s): Christian Frischkorn, Freie Univ. Berlin (Germany)
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Time-resolved THz spectroscopy is used to investigate the carrier dynamics in
carbon nanotubes, which allows to monitor the energy relaxation of the optically
excited electrons. The energy of the pump pulse initially deposited into the
electronic system is rapidly dissipated to only few strongly coupled optical
phonons which heat up within few hundreds of femtoseconds. Subsequent cooling of
these phonon modes is observed on a picosecond time-scale which is substantially
faster in nanotubes than in graphite pointing to stronger lattice
anharmonicities. Temperature dependent measurements show the hot phonon decay
proceeding via generation of cold phonons like high-frequency optical phonon and
radial breathing modes.
Introduction to Ultrafast Technology
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Rick P. Trebino, Georgia Institute of Technology (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Ultrafast adaptive nanooptics
Paper 7214-10 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 1:48 PM – 2:16 PM
Author(s): Walter Pfeiffer, Univ. Bielefeld (Germany); Tobias Brixner, Dmitri V.
Voronine, Univ. Würzburg (Germany); F. Javier Garcia de Abajo, Consejo Superior
de Investigaciones Científicas (Spain); Martin Aeschlimann, Univ. Kaiserslautern
(Germany); Michael K. Bauer, Christian-Albrechts-Univ. zu Kiel (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Control of spatial and temporal properties of near-fields provides fascinating
possibilities for nanoscale spectroscopy and manipulation of quantum systems.
Recent progress to flexibly control such near-fields using optimally
polarization-shaped femtosecond laser pulses is presented.
Ultrafast optical and terahertz spectroscopy of carrier relaxation and
recombination dynamics in graphene
Paper 7214-11 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 2:16 PM – 2:44 PM
Author(s): Farhan Rana, Cornell Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Using optical-pump/optical-probe and optical-pump/terahertz-probe spectroscopies
we study the ultrafast intraband relaxation and interband recombination dynamics
of photoexcited electrons and holes in graphene. We find three distinct
processes with their respective time scales. On short ~15-150 fs time scales,
the photoexcited carriers thermalize and acquire a hot Fermi-Dirac distribution.
On ~0.15-1.5 ps time scales, the hot carriers cool due to phonon scattering. On
~1.5-15 ps time scales, the photogenerated electrons and holes recombine. The
recombination times are found to be carrier density dependent.
Ultrafast semiconductor quantum optics
Paper 7214-13 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 3:12 PM – 3:40 PM
Author(s): Rudolf Bratschitsch, Univ. Konstanz (Germany)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Semiconductor quantum dots are promising systems for robust and scalable quantum
information processing. Ultrafast sequences of coherent quantum operations may
be envisioned with femtosecond light pulses, if the involved quantum states are
separated by at least tens of meV. We present two-color femtosecond pump-probe
spectroscopy on a single self-assembled CdSe/ZnSe quantum dot. The transient
quantum dynamics is probed with resonant excitation and detection. Ultrafast
Coulomb renormalization and single exciton gain are observed with these first
resonant pump-probe measurements on a single-electron system. We will also
discuss strategies to increase the light-quantum dot coupling via optical
nanoantennas and microresonators.
Photoinduced ultrafast structural dynamics of nanomaterials
Paper 7214-14 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 4:00 PM – 4:28 PM
Author(s): Jau Tang, Pying Yu, Po-Tze Tai, Sheng-Hsien Lin, Academia Sinica
(Taiwan)
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We will report our study of photoinduced structural dynamics of nanomaterials of
various shapes and sizes by a femtosecond laser heating pulse as detected by
time-resolved electron diffraction or transient optical absorption. This work
improves the understanding of nanoscale heat transfer and the ultrafast
structural dynamics in nanomaterials such as thin films, spheres, prisms, disks,
rods, pyramids and cubes. This work allows us to elucidate the roles of dynamic
expansion/contraction and the more well-known static linear expansion.
Control of ultrafast pulse propagation in semiconductor components
Paper 7214-19 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:28 AM – 8:56 AM
Author(s): Mike van der Poel, Per L. Hansen, Yaohui Chen, Kresten Yvind, Jesper
Mørk, Danmarks Tekniske Univ. (Denmark)
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Time shifting of optical pulses with duration in the range from 100 fs to a few
ps represents one extreme of slow light, where THz bandwidth for the slow down
or speed up is necessary. The physics of the time shifting of such very short
pulses involves the gain saturation of the optical medium and is different from
the slow-light mechanisms responsible for time shifting of pulses of more narrow
bandwidth. Experimental and theoretical results with semiconductor components
are presented, emphasizing the physics as well as the limitations imposed by the
dynamical processes.
Four-dimensional visualization of ultrafast nuclear motion by electron
diffraction
Paper 7214-21 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:24 AM – 9:52 AM
Author(s): Peter N. Baum, Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München (Germany) and
California Institute of Technology (United States)
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Dynamical changes in condensed matter and molecules involve motion of atoms and
electrons from initial to final conformations. To observe such rearrangements in
space and time, picometer resolution and femtosecond timing are required.
Ultrashort electron pulses, because of their short De Broglie wavelength, allow
to directly visualize atomic-scale motions in all four dimensions. Recent
results on solid-to-solid phase transformations in vanadium dioxide and
ultrafast laser ablation of graphite will be discussed, and concepts for the
generation of free attosecond electron pulses will be presented, in order to
eventually reach the time scale of electron motions with ultrafast diffraction.
Compact ultrafast lasers based on quantum-dot structures
Paper 7222-16 of Conference 7222
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 10:00 AM
Author(s): Edik U. Rafailov, M. A. Cataluna, K. G. Wilcox, S. A. Zolotovskaya,
Univ. of Dundee (United Kingdom)
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Novel materials, notably quantum-dot (QD) semiconductor structures offer the
unique possibility of combining exploitable spectral broadening of both gain and
absorption with ultrafast carrier dynamic properties. Thanks to these
characteristics QD based devices have enhanced the properties of ultrashort
pulse lasers and opened up new possibilities in ultrafast science and
technology. In this paper we will review recent results, which demonstrate that
quantum-dot structures can be designed to provide compact and efficient
ultrashort pulse laser sources with high and low repetition rates.
CARS microscopy using linearly-chirped ultrafast laser pulses
Paper 7183-29 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:10 AM – 11:25 AM
Author(s): Israel Rocha-Mendoza, Wolfgang W. Langbein, Paola Borri, Cardiff
Univ. (United Kingdom)
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We present a home-built CARS microscope which exploits linearly-chirped
ultrafast laser pulses. Using glass blocks of calibrated group-velocity
dispersion, the CARS Stokes and Pump pulses are equally chirped to pulse
durations ranging from 400fs to 2ps. For short durations, a Pump pulse arriving
on the tailing edge of the Stokes optimizes the CARS signal and reduces the
non-resonant CARS. For long durations, corresponding to a spectral width of the
instantaneous frequency difference lower than the Raman linewidth, the timing is
no longer critical, and the highest signal to non-resonant background ratio is
achieved.
Latest developments of ultrafast fiber laser and its material applications
Paper 7214-26 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 1:20 PM – 1:48 PM
Author(s): Gyu Cheon Cho, Bing Liu, Lawrence Shah, Zhenlin Liu, Yong Che,
Jingzhou Xu, IMRA America, Inc. (United States)
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Increasing research activities have undertaken in generation of ultrashort
pulses based on fiber laser in very recent years. Generation of high energy
pulse at a high average power out of a fiber laser has been one of the main
challenges, which can significantly broaden perspectives of both spectroscopic
and material applications. In fact, fiber lasers have been considered to be an
advantageous alternative of many lasers based on free-space optics. Realization
of a compact and environmentally stable ultrafast laser easy to operate has
become thereby a very critical factor. In this presentation we will present the
recent development of ultrafast fiber laser and its application in material
research.
Ultrafast imaging of plasmas produced in conditions of femtosecond waveguide
writing in dielectrics
Paper 7203-23 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:20 PM – 2:40 PM
Author(s): Wojciech Gawelda, Daniel Puerto Garcia, Jan Siegel, Alejandro Ruiz de
la Cruz, Andrés Ferrer Moreu, Marcial Galván Sosa, Francisco Javier Solís
Céspedes, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (Spain)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Femtosecond laser-induced plasmas in bulk dielectrics are imaged under waveguide
writing conditions and their temporal evolution is observed using ultrafast
pump-probe microscopy. The results, obtained using an elliptically shaped beam,
allow identifying multiple beam filamentation and pre-focal energy depletion as
important energy loss channels, which deteriorate the spatial distribution of
the laser-deposited energy. Time-resolved images of the interaction volume show
how these undesirable effects can be minimized via pulse duration, energy and
polarization at a given processing depth. As a consequence, energy deposition in
the focal region is greatly enhanced leading to the production of waveguides
with optimized performance.
Ultrafast dual-laser system for picosecond acoustics
Paper 7203-28 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:30 PM – 4:50 PM
Author(s): Eric P. Mottay, Pierre Rigail, Amplitude Systemes (France); Claire
Bastianelli, Sebastien Ermeneux, ALPhANOV (France); Clement Rossignol,
Jean-Michel Rampnoux, Stefan Dilhaire, Univ. Bordeaux I (France)
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We present a new compact ultrafast laser system dedicated to thermal and
acoustic measurements in the picosecond time domain. The system uses two
ultrafast diode-pumped Ytterbium oscillator, whose repetition rates are slightly
shifted and synchronised. The laser is used in an asynchronous optical sampling
configuration, does not use any delay line, and allow for extremely fast
measurements, with a picosecond temporal resolution and long acquisition time,
up to 20 ns. We report on the application of this system to thermal and acoustic
measurements in micro-electronics applications.
Three dimensional (3D) lithographic microfabrication based on ultrafast optical
pulse manipulation
Paper 7183-46 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 8:45 AM – 9:05 AM
Author(s): Daekeun Kim, Peter T. C. So, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(United States)
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Two-photon excitation microfabrication allows 3D fabrication at micrometer
scale, but fabrication speed is limited by the point-by-point writing process.
In this paper, we introduce two-photon excitation 3D lithographic
microfabrication based on wide-field illumination induced by temporal focusing.
Modulating ultrafast optical pulse generates temporal focusing and it enables
depth-resolved lithographic processing using wide-field illumination. We derive
a mathematical model for optical resolution in order to identify the design
parameters that affect optical resolution. This model is further confirmed by
empirical measurements.
New developments in ultrafast lasers for non-linear imaging
Paper 7183-54 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:45 AM – 11:00 AM
Author(s): Marco F. Arrigoni, Coherent, Inc. (United States)
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Multiphoton microscopy has driven in recent years development of specialized
ultrafast laser sources with pulse duration, tuning range and power tailored to
provide optimum images. More recent trends in non-linear optics microscopy
include multimodal imaging (CARS, OCT, MPE and harmonic microscopy), use of
longer wavelengths and preconditioning of the laser beam parameters to better
match the optical chain and obtain better, deeper images of the live sample. In
this presentation I will describe recent advances in lasers sources that provide
extended tuning range, pulse conditioning and other user-benefits.
Ultrafast carrier dynamics and laser action in ZnO nanowires
Paper 7214-38 of Conference 7214
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 1:00 PM – 1:28 PM
Author(s): Marijn A. M. Versteegh, Ruben E. C. van der Wel, Benjamin J. M.
Brenny, Bas Zegers, Wouter Ensing, Jaap I. Dijkhuis, Univ. Utrecht (Netherlands)
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To examine the mechanism responsible for laser action at room temperature, we
have performed ultrafast time- and wavelength-resolved pump-probe gain
measurements on a ‘forest’ of 100-500 nm thick and 20 µm long ZnO nanowires.
When we pump at the highest fluences and probe at 385 nm or 390 nm, we observe
strong amplification, accompanied by a decay of the gain on the subpicosecond
time scale, which we attribute to stimulated emission by a degenerate
electron-hole plasma. The fast decay is followed by a slow, non-uniexponential
decay, which points to stimulated emission by a non-degenerate electron-hole
plasma.
Ultrafast all-optical photonic integrate circuits: nonlinear optics on a chip
Paper 7212-23 of Conference 7212
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 1:10 PM – 1:40 PM
Author(s): Benjamin J. Eggleton, The Univ. of Sydney (Australia)
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This paper reviews recent progress in developing highly nonlinear ultrafast
all-optical processing photonic integrated circuits. Highly nonlinear
chalcogenide glass provides ultrafast optical nonlinearity with low two-photon
absorption and negligible free-carriers. Highlights include: low-threshold
supercontinuum generation, optical switching at 640Gb/s and efficicent
parametric amplification.
Novel ultrafast semiconductor lasers based on surface-emitting lasers
Paper 7193-44 of Conference 7193
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 1:50 PM – 2:20 PM
Author(s): Ursula Keller, ETH Zürich (Switzerland)
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Diode-pumped solid-state lasers supported pulse repetition rates as high as 160
GHz and motivated a new approach replacing the ion-doped solid-state laser with
a vertical external cavity surface emitting laser (VECSEL), which has generated
picosecond pulses with more than 2 W of average output power. SESAM modelocked
VECSELs support further integration of gain and saturable absorber within one
wafer and ultimately electrical pumping. Such modelocked integrated
external-cavity surface emitting lasers (MIXSELs) offer an ultrafast laser
technology that is scalable between 10 and 100 GHz and enable new applications
where todays ultrafast lasers are considered too bulky and expensive.
Ultrafast electronic transport and relaxation dynamics in low-dimensional
semiconductor nanostructures
Paper 7214-41 of Conference 7214
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:24 PM – 2:52 PM
Author(s): Hyunyong Choi, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (United States) and
Univ. of California, Berkeley (United States); Theodore B. Norris, Univ. of
Michigan (United States); Jerome Faist, ETH Zürich (Switzerland); Federico
Capasso, Harvard Univ. (United States)
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Ultrafast time-resolved pump-probe measurements are used to study low energy
excitations and dynamics of electronic transport in various semiconductor
nanostructures. In quantum cascade lasers, we observe ultrafast gain recovery
dynamics due to electronic transport in the structures.
5D multiphoton microscopy: in-situ diagnostics for ultrafast laser 3D
nanofabrication
Paper 7201-38 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Jianzhao Li, Shane M. Eaton, Peter R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An ultrafast-laser optical system has been developed that combines nano-scale
machining with 5-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions + time + wavelength spectrum)
optical microscopy to enable on-the-fly diagnostic feedback for target alignment
and optimizing femtosecond laser interactions. Laser-interaction volumes were
temporally and spectrally characterized in situ during laser-formation of buried
optical waveguides in bulk glasses. Broadband photo emission is shown to
temporally follow the dynamics of thermal diffusion with a definitive onset of
prolonged heat accumulation effect above ~300 kHz repetition rate (at ~200 nJ
pulse energy) in borosilicate glass. The spectral emission is attributed to
thermally-activated photoluminescence that correlates with reduced waveguide
loss. In this way, a new means for intelligent laser processing is identified to
actively control optical waveguide quality during processing.
5D multiphoton microscopy: in-situ diagnostics for ultrafast laser 3D
nanofabrication
Paper 7203-38 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Jianzhao Li, Shane M. Eaton, Peter R. Herman, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
An ultrafast-laser optical system has been developed that combines nano-scale
machining with 5-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions + time + wavelength spectrum)
optical microscopy to enable on-the-fly diagnostic feedback for target alignment
and optimizing femtosecond laser interactions. Laser-interaction volumes were
temporally and spectrally characterized in situ during laser-formation of buried
optical waveguides in bulk glasses. Broadband photo emission is shown to
temporally follow the dynamics of thermal diffusion with a definitive onset of
prolonged heat accumulation effect above ~300 kHz repetition rate (at ~200 nJ
pulse energy) in borosilicate glass. The spectral emission is attributed to
thermally-activated photoluminescence that correlates with reduced waveguide
loss. In this way, a new means for intelligent laser processing is identified to
actively control optical waveguide quality during processing.
Compact, rigid, and high-power ultrafast laser system applying a glass-block
cavity
Paper 7193-104 of Conference 7193
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Shin-Ichiro Aoshima, Shingo Oishi, Toshiharu Moriguchi, Yoichi
Kawada, Masatoshi Fujimoto, Katsumi Shibayama, Masaomi Takasaka, Kenshi
Fukumitsu, Shigeru Sakamoto, Koei Yamamoto, Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We developed a compact Yb:YAG ceramic regenerative amplification system using a
rectangle glass block in its cavity. A pulse to be amplified is propagated in a
long distance in the glass block by being reflected repetitively at end faces of
glass under the condition of total internal reflection. Furthermore, we
developed transmission gratings that have a diffraction efficiency of more than
95%. Finally, we have succeeded in reducing the floor area of an amplifier down
to less than 2,000 cm^2. We obtained 1.2-ps compressed pulses of 4-W average
power, i.e. 0.20-mJ energy at a repetition rate of 20 kHz.
Ultrafast-pulse generation and shaping in dispersion oscillating fibers
Paper 7195-88 of Conference 7195
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Alexej A. Sysoliatin, A.M. Prokhorov General Physics Institute
(Russian Federation); Andrey I. Konyukhov, Leonid A. Melnikov, Saratov State
Univ. (Russian Federation); Vladimir A. Stasyuk, PriTel Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
In this work we propose a novel method to generate and control the ps and subps
optical pulses by its amplitude and width in dispersion oscillating
fiber (DOF). In such a fiber with periodically modulated dispersion, when the
oscillation period approaches the soliton period, the resonance effects take
place. Simulation and experimental results indicate that the DOF fibers could
have the different applications in optical signal processing (like LC-contour in
microwave). In addition, a possibility to change the waveguide
parameters along the fiber length results to increasing of the SBS threshold by
7dB over the conventional nonlinear fibers.
Ultrafast exciton dynamics of highly excited bulk ZnO
Paper 7214-47 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:28 AM – 8:56 AM
Author(s): Tina Shih, Harvard Univ. (United States); Jan-Peter Richters, Tobias
Voss, Univ. Bremen (Germany); Eric D. Mazur, Harvard Univ. (United States)
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Advances in ZnO-based device technologies rely on a fundamental understanding of
carrier dynamics and excitonic effects at high excitation densities. With
intense, ultrashort, 266-nm laser pulses, we are able to monitor exciton
dynamics in m-plane and c-plane ZnO in a micro-cryostat pump-probe reflectometry
setup. Depending on the excitation fluence, the reflectivity data show a damping
of the ZnO exciton resonances after fs-laser excitation, which are accurately
described by theoretical reflectivity calculations.
Transform limited high-energy and high-average-power ultrafast fiber amplifier
Paper 7195-37 of Conference 7195
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 8:50 AM
Author(s): Yoann Zaouter, Eric P. Mottay, Amplitude Systemes (France); Johan
Boullet, Eric Cormier, Univ. Bordeaux I (France)
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We report on a high energy (> 100 microJoules), high average power (> 30W),
short duration (270 fs) ultrafast fiber amplifier, with an excellent temporal
and spectral quality (1.1 times the Fourier limit). Although high energy and
very high average power has been already demonstrated in both nanosecond and CW
operation, power scaling of ultrafast single-mode fiber amplifiers has been
restricted by the non-linearities induced phase distorsions. The laser uses the
chirped pulse amplification technique, where nonlinear phase shifts are
exploited in conjunction with a mismatched stretcher and compressor.
Analyzing ultrafast carrier and spin dynamics in III-V semiconductors with
optical orientation methods
Paper 7214-48 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:56 AM – 9:24 AM
Author(s): Markus Betz, Christine Hautmann, Florian Jaworeck, Markus Wesseli,
Technische Univ. München (Germany)
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Ultrafast optical orientation methods are widely used to study ultrafast carrier
spin dynamics. Here, electron spin relaxation times in n-doped and nominally
undoped bulk GaSb are measured with time-resolved circular dichroism and Faraday
rotation induced by 1.55 µm, 150 fs pulses. We find 4-35 ps time constants with
a strong temperature dependence. Many aspects of the results are realted to the
large spin-orbit coupling in GaSb, consistent with D'yakonov-Perel type spin
relaxation. In similar experiments in GaAs at 800 nm, we additionally use
spectral resolution within the ultrabroadband probe pulse. We show that, in
addition to electron spin dynamics, also ultrafast energy relaxation of
nonequilibrium carriers can be analyzed with time-resolved Faraday rotation.
Ultrafast response of negative-index metamaterials in the near infrared
Paper 7205-30 of Conference 7205
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 11:20 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): David J. Cho, Feng Wang, Xiang Zhang, Yuen-Ron Shen, Univ. of
California, Berkeley (United States); Wei Wu, Ekaterina Ponizovskaya,
Hewlett-Packard Labs. (United States); Pratik Chaturvedi, Univ. of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign (United States); Alexander M. Bratkovksy, Shih-Yuan Wang,
Hewlett-Packard Labs. (United States)
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Nanoimprint lithography is used to fabricate a metamaterial with the “fishnet”
structure composed of Ag/α-Si/Ag layers that exhibits negative refractive index
in the near-infrared. We have carried out a femtosecond pump-probe experiment to
measure the transient photo-induced response of this structure. With a pump
fluence of 330uJ/cm2 at 800 nm, the transmission at the magnetic resonance is
increased by ~15.4%. The induced change originated from carrier excitation in
the α-Si layer has a fast decay constant of 1.1ps.
Ultrafast dynamics of InN thin films
Paper 7214-53 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 11:39 AM – 12:07 PM
Author(s): Der-Jun Jang, Guan-Tin Lin, Ching-Lien Hsiao, Li-Wei Tu, National Sun
Yat-sen Univ. (Taiwan); Meng-En Lee, National Kaoshiung Normal Univ. (Taiwan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The ultrafast dynamics of InN thin films grown on Si(111) subtracts has been
studied by a time-resolved photoluminescence upconversion apparatus. The
obtained carrier cooling curves can be explained by carriers releasing excessive
energy through the carrier–LO-phonon interaction. The extracted effective phonon
emission times increase with the photoexcited carrier concentration due to the
hot phonon effect and come close to the theoretical prediction of 23 fs at small
photoexcited carrier concentration. The study of the time-resolved
photoluminescence at the band gap energy concludes that the Auger rates are
small at low carrier concentrations but increase quadratically with the carrier
concentration.
High-energy ultrafast thin-disk oscillators
Paper 7193-62 of Conference 7193
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:00 PM – 1:30 PM
Author(s): Joerg Neuhaus, Univ. of Konstanz (Germany) and TRUMPF Laser GmbH & Co
KG (Germany); Dominik Bauer, TRUMPF Laser GmbH & Co KG (Germany) and Univ. of
Konstanz (Germany); Dirk H. Sutter, Jochen Kleinbauer, Sascha Weiler, Alexander
Killi, TRUMPF Laser GmbH & Co KG (Germany); Thomas Dekorsy, Univ. of Konstanz
(Germany)
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We present recent results on ultrafast pulse generation with record pulse
energies of tens of microjoules directly from a laser oscillator. At repetition
rates of a few megahertz, average powers of many tens of watts are obtained from
a mode-locked thin-disk resonator without any need for further amplifier stages.
Technological advantages are discussed with respect to alternative concepts for
industrial ultrafast lasers.
Ultrafast electron-phonon and phonon-phonon scattering in highly doped
semiconductors
Paper 7214-54 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:20 PM – 1:48 PM
Author(s): Jacob B. Khurgin, The Johns Hopkins Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
We study the interaction between electron, and optical and acoustic phonons in
the channel of field effect transistor. We show that the intra-branch scattering
of LO phonons due to disorder and interaction with hot electrons plays pivotal
role in the LO phonon decay and is thus ultimately responsible for cooling of
electrons and the performance of the transistor at high power. Our theoretical
results are confirmed by the experiemnal studies done in collaboration.
Ultrafast Fiber Lasers
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Martin E. Fermann, IMRA America, Inc. (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
News applications in authentication and traceability using ultrafast laser
marking
Paper 7201-31 of Conference 7201
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 2:00 PM – 2:30 PM
Author(s): Zbigniew Sagan, Benjamin Dusser, ATT Advanced Track & Trace (France)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Ultrafast carrier dynamics on Si surfaces studied by time-resolved two-photon
photoemission spectroscopy
Paper 7214-59 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 3:40 PM – 4:08 PM
Author(s): Katsumi Tanimura, Osaka Univ. (Japan)
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Carrier dynamics on semiconductor surfaces is of great scientific and
technological interest. In combination with carrier diffusion and drift
transport, ultrafast primary processes of carrier-carrier (e-e) scattering and
electron-phonon (e-p) scattering in bulk electronic states, govern the dynamics
near surfaces. In spite of the accumulating knowledge, no direct picture of the
carrier relaxation in bulk states nor of dynamical coupling of bulk electrons to
intrinsic Si surface states have emerged.
We study ultrafast carrier relaxation in Si by means of time-resolved two-photon
photoemission spectroscopy with tunable fs lasers as the pump light...
Ultrafast optical spin rotation in semiconductors
Paper 7225-18 of Conference 7225
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:50 PM – 5:15 PM
Author(s): Hailin Wang, Univ. of Oregon (United States)
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Recent experimental progresses on realizing ultrafast spin rotation of localized
electron spins as well as electron spins in two-dimensional electron gas will be
presented.
Ultrafast nanowire superconducting single-photon detector with photon number
resolving capability
Paper 7236-12 of Conference 7236
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 10:20 AM – 11:00 AM
Author(s): Gregory N. Goltsman, Moscow State Pedagogical Univ. (Russian
Federation)
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An overview of the state-of-the-art of the nanowire superconducting
single-photon detector (SSPD) is presented. At 2K temperature the SSPD
demonstrate superb characteristics: up to 30% quantum efficiency at 1300nm
wavelength, dark counts rate below 2*10^-4 s^-1, 200 ps pulse duration with 16
ps timing jitter. SSPD was successfully used in single-photon sources
characterization and quantum cryptography.
A photon number resolving SSPD was developed. The advantage of our approach is
scalability to resolve tens of photons. It bridges the gap between single-photon
detectors and traditional detectors with the response linear to the power.
Ultrafast parametric oscillators for spectroscopy
Paper 7193-84 of Conference 7193
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 1:20 PM – 1:50 PM
Author(s): Derryck T. Reid, Lukasz W. Kornaszewski, T. P. Mueller, Nicolas
Gayraud, William N. MacPherson, Duncan P. Hand, James M. Stone, Jonathan C.
Knight, Heriot-Watt Univ. (United Kingdom)
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The high spatial coherence, wide tunability and broad intrinsic bandwidth of
femtosecond optical parametric oscillators makes them uniquely attractive
sources for spectroscopy in the visible and infrared. Using systems based on
MgO:PPLN, and pumped by a self-modelocked Ti:sapphire laser, we have shown
free-space and photonic-crystal-fibre-based spectroscopy of methane to
concentrations as low as 50 ppm. New diode-pumped solid-state ultrafast lasers
are now able to exceed the performance of Ti:sapphire lasers and we will
describe performance obtained using a Yb:fibre-pumped OPO that so far has
produced 20 nJ pulses directly from the oscillator, with the potential for
energy scaling to ~1 µJ levels.
Multimodal ultrafast spectroscopy system based on 35-fs Ti:Sapphire CPA laser
Paper 7193-85 of Conference 7193
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 1:50 PM – 2:10 PM
Author(s): Ruben Zadoyan, Newport Corp. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
I will describe a flexible and easily configurable ultrafast spectroscopy setup
based on 1kHz 3mJ 35fs amplified Ti:Sapphire laser. The setup consisting of
several independently operated modules is well suited for Transient Absorption,
CARS, FWM, 2D IR and other ultrafast spectroscopies. As an example, experimental
data on several iquids, colloidal samples and conjugated polymers will be
presented.
Ultrafast high strain rate acoustic wave measurements at high static pressure in
a diamond anvil cell
Paper 7214-6 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 10:43 AM – 11:11 AM
Author(s): Michael R. Armstrong, Jonathan C. Crowhurst, Evan J. Reed, Joseph M.
Zaug, Lawrence Livermore National Lab. (United States)
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We use sub-picosecond laser pulses to launch ultra-high strain rate (~10^9/s)
nonlinear acoustic waves into a methanol-ethanol pressure medium which has been
precompressed in a standard diamond anvil cell. Using ultrafast interferometry,
we have characterized acoustic wave propagation into the pressure medium at
static compression up to 24 GPa. We find that the velocity is dependent on the
incident laser fluence, demonstrating a nonlinear acoustic response which may
result in shock wave behavior. We compare our results with low strain, low
strain-rate acoustic data. This technique provides controlled access to regions
of thermodynamic phase space that are otherwise difficult to obtain.
Photo-induced insulator-metal phase transition observed by the terahertz
pump-probe spectroscopy
Paper 7214-25 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 11:39 AM – 12:07 PM
Author(s): Makoto Nakajima, Naoko Takubo, Zenji Hiroi, Yutaka Ueda, Tohru
Suemoto, The Univ. of Tokyo (Japan)
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The ultrafast terahertz response to the photoexcitation in vanadium dioxide was
investigated using the optical-pump terahertz-probe technique at room
temperature. The optical excitation induced an ultrafast decrease of the
transmittance of the terahertz pulses within ~ 1 ps, and then the transmittance
decreases gradually up to 100 ps. This two step behaviour is very similar to the
previous reports of the time resolved X-ray and electron diffractions. This fact
indicates that the increase of the electronic conductivity and the change of the
lattice structure proceed in parallel. This observed signal is ascribed to the
generation of the metallic state.
Ultrafast Yb:YAG thin-disk oscillator with pulse energies exceeding 25 μJ
suitable for efficient ablation with negligible heat affects
Paper 7203-26 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 3:50 PM – 4:10 PM
Author(s): Joerg Neuhaus, Univ. of Konstanz (Germany); Dominik Bauer, TRUMPF
Laser GmbH & Co. KG (Germany) and Univ. of Konstanz (Germany); Christoph
Scharfenberg, Jochen Kleinbauer, Alexander Killi, Sascha Weiler, Dirk H. Sutter,
TRUMPF Laser GmbH & Co. KG (Germany); Thomas Dekorsy, Univ. of Konstanz
(Germany)
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We report on the highest pulse energies ever obtained directly from an ultrafast
oscillator without additional amplifier stages: Twenty-five microjoules are
generated using an active multi-pass, TEM00 thin-disk resonator operating in
air. Passive soliton mode-locking in the sub-picosecond regime is started and
stabilized by a semiconductor saturable absorber mirror. An external modulator
allows for user-selectable pulse energies and repetition rates. The average
power exceeds 70W and could be scaled further, both in terms of pulse energy as
well as repetition rate. A simple laboratory setup already allows for surface
structuring with negligible heat affects and high productivity.
When shorter is better
Paper 7203-31 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 5:30 PM – 5:50 PM
Author(s): Marcos M. Dantus, Michigan State Univ. (United States) and
BioPhotonic Solutions Inc. (United States)
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Ultrafast lasers have opened a whole range of applications due to their high
peak intensity. Unfortunately, they are sensitive to the environment and the
pulses are easily broadened. This talk will focus on how the MIIPS (multiphoton
intrapulse interference phase scan) technology is being use to deliver to the
target transform limited pulses with pulse durations as short as 4.6 fs. The
performance of more than 16 different commercial lasers using MIIPS will be
demonstrated. Micromachining results will be used to illustrate advantages from
consistent delivery of ultrafast pulses through complex focusing optics.
Three-dimensional photonic devices fabricated by ultrafast lasers for optical
sensing in lab-on-a-chip
Paper 7201-35 of Conference 7201
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Rebeca Martinez Vazquez, Roberto Osellame, Politecnico di Milano
(Italy); Chaitanya Dongre, Hugo J. Hoekstra, Markus Pollnau, Univ. Twente
(Netherlands); Hans H. van den Vlekkert, Lionix BV (Netherlands); Rob van
Weeghel, Zebra Bioscience B.V. (Netherlands); Paul Watts, The Univ. of Hull
(United Kingdom); Roberta Ramponi, Giulio Cerullo, Politecnico di Milano (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
A lab-on-a-chip (LOC) is a device that incorporates in a single substrate the
functionalities of a biological laboratory with micrometer dimensions. The next
technological challenge of LOCs is direct on-chip integration of photonic
functionalities. Ultrafast laser processing of the bulk of a dielectric material
is a very flexible and simple method to produce photonic devices inside
microfluidic chips for capillary electrophoresis (CE) or chemical microreactors.
In this work we report on the use of femtosecond laser pulses to fabricate
photonic devices inside commercial CE chips. The fabrication of single
waveguides intersecting the channels allows one to perform LIF sensing.
Waveguide splitters are used for multipoint sensing measurements. Finally, Mach-Zehnder
interferometers are used for label-free sensing by means of refractive index
changes detection.
Three-dimensional photonic devices fabricated by ultrafast lasers for optical
sensing in lab-on-a-chip
Paper 7203-35 of Conference 7203
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 2:40 PM – 3:00 PM
Author(s): Rebeca Martinez Vazquez, Roberto Osellame, Politecnico di Milano
(Italy); Chaitanya Dongre, Hugo J. Hoekstra, Markus Pollnau, Univ. Twente
(Netherlands); Hans H. van den Vlekkert, Lionix BV (Netherlands); Rob van
Weeghel, Zebra Bioscience B.V. (Netherlands); Paul Watts, The Univ. of Hull
(United Kingdom); Roberta Ramponi, Giulio Cerullo, Politecnico di Milano (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
A lab-on-a-chip (LOC) is a device that incorporates in a single substrate the
functionalities of a biological laboratory with micrometer dimensions. The next
technological challenge of LOCs is direct on-chip integration of photonic
functionalities. Ultrafast laser processing of the bulk of a dielectric material
is a very flexible and simple method to produce photonic devices inside
microfluidic chips for capillary electrophoresis (CE) or chemical microreactors.
In this work we report on the use of femtosecond laser pulses to fabricate
photonic devices inside commercial CE chips. The fabrication of single
waveguides intersecting the channels allows one to perform LIF sensing.
Waveguide splitters are used for multipoint sensing measurements. Finally, Mach-Zehnder
interferometers are used for label-free sensing by means of refractive index
changes detection.
High-peak/average power high-repetition rate
Paper 7193-65 of Conference 7193
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 2:10 PM – 2:30 PM
Author(s): Sterling J. Backus, Xiaoshi Zhang, Gregory J. Taft, Hsiao-Hua Liu,
Dirk Mueller, Henry C. Kapteyn, Margaret M. Murnane, Kapteyn-Murnane Labs. Inc.
(United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
There is a growing need for next generation ultrafast sources operating at
higher peak and average power levels and at wavelengths in the ultraviolet,
visible, and infrared regions. For practical purposes, many of the applications
will require repetition rates of 10-200 kHz, pulse energies of up to a few mJ at
10-20 kHz repetition rate, frequency conversion to new wavelengths via nonlinear
conversion, and pulse durations of 50 fs or less to drive the nonlinear process.
Here, we report on a new class of Ti:sapphire ultrafast laser designed to
address this need. Higher pulse energies at 10–200 kHz repetition rates are
generated by implementing cryogenic cooling and pulsed laser pumping of the
amplifier stage. We have developed laser systems implementing this approach at
the 10-20 W/ 1-100 kHz level. The performance of these systems and the potential
for power-scaling will be discussed.
Charge dynamics in semiconductors and quantum wells from THz emission
Paper 7214-57 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 2:44 PM – 3:12 PM
Author(s): James N. Heyman, Macalester College (United States); Laura C. Bell,
The Univ. of Utah (United States)
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We use ultrafast THz emission as a time-resolved probe in two studies: We find
that THz emission from quantum wells depends only weakly on extrinsic carrier
density, and that the intersubband coherence time remains ~3ps for
photo-excitation up to 0.2eV above bandgap [1], consistent with THz emission
driven by quantum beating rather than ultrafast field-screening. In addition, we
observe the light-hole polaron resonance in THz cyclotron emission from GaAs and
InP. This work was funded by the National Science Foundation under the NSF-RUI
Program (DMR-0606181).
[1] L. Bell, et. al., APL 92, 142108 (2008)
Dynamic ultrafast laser beam tailoring for multispot photo-inscription of deep
photonic devices in bulk transparent materials
Paper 7205-37 of Conference 7205
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:30 PM
Author(s): Cyril Mauclair, Guanghua Cheng, Nicolas Huot, Eric Audouard, Lab.
Hubert Curien (France); Arkadi Rosenfeld, Ingolf V. Hertel, Max-Born-Institut
(Germany); Razvan I. Stoian, Lab. Hubert Curien (France)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Femtosecond laser processing in transparent media can generate localized
increase of the refractive index. Thus, by simple translation of the laser spot,
light-guiding structures are achievable in the three dimensions. We report in
the following a procedure of dynamic ultrafast laser beam tailoring for parallel
photo inscription of deep photonic devices in a-SiO2. The wave front of the beam
is controlled to achieve multi spot operation with real time adjustable
separation of the spots. The procedure involves the control of the spatial phase
of the beam with a spatial light modulator and is based on imaging of the laser
spots.
Optical LAN technologies for the ultra-high definition video era
Paper 7235-4 of Conference 7235
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 9:30 AM – 10:00 AM
Author(s): Shu Namiki, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and
Technology (Japan); Hiroshi Onaka, Tadashi Ikeuchi, Fujitsu Ltd. (Japan);
Kimiyuki Oyamada, Japan Broadcasting Corp. (Japan); Ken Morito, Fujitsu Ltd.
(Japan); Atsushi Sugitatsu, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. (Japan); Hiroshi Ishikawa,
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (Japan); Tohru
Asami, The Univ. of Tokyo (Japan)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
This invited talk will review the development of ultrafast all-optical LAN
technologies, conducted by NEDO, Japan. First, we will provide an outlook for
the energy issues of future network equipment, then point out the importance of
optical circuit-switched networks, particularly for the future local area
networks in the forthcoming ultra-high definition, or ‘Super Hi-vision’, video
era. To realize ultrafast all-optical LAN, we argue that scalable network
interface card technologies are the key. As specific development topics,
40G-CMOS based optical transceivers, picosecond all-optical switching using the
inter-subband transition (ISBT) devices, high-temperature operating
semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA), and integrated high dynamic-range
wavelength converters will be introduced.
Femtosecond pulse shaping for single molecule measurements
Paper 7185-26 of Conference 7185
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 9:45 AM – 10:05 AM
Author(s): Fernando D. Stefani, Institut de Ciències Fotòniques (Spain) and
Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München (Germany); Daan Brinks, Niek F. van Hulst,
Institut de Ciències Fotòniques (Spain)
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We developed a femtosecond pulse shaping scheme suitable for measurements at the
nanoscale, therefore allowing new experiments on individual nano-systems and
molecules. We demonstrate control over excitation probability of single
molecules by shaping pulses on the femtosecond to picoseconds timescale.
Unprecedented information about the ultrafast dynamics and spectral properties
of the single molecules is obtained.
Optimizing CARS signal using coherent control methods
Paper 7183-25 of Conference 7183
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 9:45 AM – 10:00 AM
Author(s): Vladimir S. Malinovsky, MagiQ Technologies, Inc. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Recently we have shown that linearly chirped ultrafast pulses can be utilized to
maximize CARS coherence. The method, uses the chirp sign variation at the
central time, and gives robust adiabatic excitation of the resonant vibrational
mode. Here we analyze influence of fast decoherence in the molecular samples and
compare robustness and selectivity of the method to other excitation proposals.
We demonstrate that the proposed adiabatic method allows achieving chemical
sensitivity with high resolution and can be used to obtain CARS signal in
molecular systems with coherence times of several hundred of femtoseconds.
Trapping gas bubble in water with tightly focused ultrashort laser pulses
Paper 7203-22 of Conference 7203
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 2:00 PM – 2:20 PM
Author(s): Sergey Oshemkov, Pixer Technology Ltd. (Israel); Dvorkin Lev,
Lasermax Engineering Ltd. (Israel); Vladimir Dmitriev, Pixer Technology Ltd.
(Israel)
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We demonstrated that a gas bubble in water can be trapped in a tightly focused
beam of a high repetition rate ultrafast laser. 200 fs width 100 kHz repetition
rate laser pulses of a Ti-Sapphire amplifier focused by a 0.5 NA microsope
objective were used for trap creation. The possibility of a trapped gas bubble
manipulation by angle scanning of a laser beam or by translation motion of the
beam focus point was shown. The trapping force was measured and the mechanism of
trapping was suggested.
Nonlinear THz response of n-type GaAs
Paper 7214-31 of Conference 7214
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:00 PM – 4:28 PM
Author(s): Michael Woerner, Max-Born-Institut für Nichtlineare Optik und
Kurzzeitspektroskopie (Germany)
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Using our novel high field THz source we performed various ultrafast experiments
on n-type GaAs. Both nonlinear THz experiments driving resonantly the 1S-2P
donor impurtiy transition and nonlinear transport experiments on free carriers
in the conduction band of GaAs give new insights into the dynamics of localized
and delocalized electrons surprisingly different to the well known linear Drude
theory.
Industrial applications of a fiber-based, high-average-power picosecond laser
Paper 7201-15 of Conference 7201
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 4:40 PM – 5:00 PM
Author(s): Colin Moorhouse, Coherent Scotland Ltd. (United Kingdom)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
With decreasing device dimensions, smaller, higher quality laser drilled
features are required, hence, it is necessary to use shorter pulse durations.
There has been significant research into ultrafast laser technology, and this
report shows that recent developments have shown that a fibre oscillator and
Diode Pumped Solid State (DPSS) amplifying technology can offer short picosecond
pulse durations (~10ps) and high average power in an industrially-rugged
package. This report outlines the advantages this technology offers for
applications such as silicon via drilling, thin film patterning, drilling holes
in metals and the machining of wide bandgap materials.
Real-time spectroscopy of a novel solid-state random laser
Paper 7212-20 of Conference 7212
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 11:00 AM – 11:20 AM
Author(s): Sara Garcia-Revilla, Joaquín M. Fernández, Rolindes Balda, Univ. del
País Vasco (Spain); Marcos Zayat, David Levy, Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales
de Madrid (Spain)
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Here we report efficient random lasing in a ground powder of a novel solid-state
material based on rhodamine 6G (Rh6G) doped nanoparticles embedded in a SiO2
matrix synthesized by the sol-gel technique. Basic properties of random lasing
such as emission kinetics, emission spectrum, and threshold of stimulated
emission are investigated by using real-time spectroscopy. The laser emission
dynamics can be accurately described by a light diffusive propagation model. The
device behaviour is close to a conventional ultrafast Q-switched laser, which is
an interesting fact aimed to further applications.
Silicon based optical pulse shaping and characterization
Paper 7212-29 of Conference 7212
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:10 PM – 4:40 PM
Author(s): Ozdal Boyraz, Xinzhu Sang, En-Kuang Tien, Univ. of California, Irvine
(United States)
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The high-index contrast between the silicon core and silica cladding enable low
cost chip-scale demonstration of all-optical nonlinear functional devices at
relatively low pump powers due to strong optical confinement the in silicon
waveguides. So far, broad ranges of applications from Raman lasers to wavelength
converters have been presented. This presentation will highlight the recent
developments on ultrafast pulse shaping and pulse characterization techniques
utilizing the strong nonlinear effects in silicon. In particular, pulse
compression due to two photon absorption and dual wavelength lasing
Femtosecond, nanosecond, and continuous-wave nonlinear optical properties of
(H2)2SnPc, Sn(OH)2Pc, Sn(Cl)2Pc studied using Z-scan technique
Paper 7197-40 of Conference 7197
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 6:00 PM
Author(s): Venugopal R. Soma, Univ. of Hyderabad (India)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Phthalocyanines and their analogues/derivatives are macromolecules with large
number of delocalized electrons possessing attractive third-order nonlinear
optical properties with prominent applications in the areas of optical limiting
and ultrafast all-optical switching. Here we present our results on the
femtosecond, nanosecond, and continuous wave (cw) experimental nonlinear optical
studies of Sn(H2)2Pc, Sn(OH)2Pc, and Sn(Cl)2Pc using the Z-scan technique
Femtosecond carrier dynamics in quasi-one-dimensional topological compounds
Paper 7214-52 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 11:11 AM – 11:39 AM
Author(s): Yasunori Toda, Hokkaido Univ. (Japan)
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Due to the recent progress of material science, quasi-one-dimensional (1D)
materials provide an opportunity for investigating the influence of topology and
dimensionality of materials on their optical and electrical properties. In this
study, we report the phase transition properties of such quasi-1D compounds by
utilizing an ultrafast optical spectroscopy. Photoinduced nonequilibrium carrier
dynamics yield characteristic features around the phase transition temperatures.
We also discuss the influence of topology and dimensionality on the phase
transitions by using polarization and excitation energy dependences of the
transient signals and their spatial characteristics.
Terahertz radiation coherently generated by acoustic waves
Paper 7215-1 of Conference 7215
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:00 PM – 1:20 PM
Author(s): Michael R. Armstrong, Evan J. Reed, Lawrence Livermore National Lab.
(United States); Ki-Yong Kim, Los Alamos National Lab. (United States); James H.
Glownia, Dept. of Energy (United States); Edwin L. Piner, John C. Roberts,
Nitronex Corp. (United States)
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Here we report the first observation of terahertz (THz) radiation coherently
generated by an acoustic wave. Such emission is directly related to the
time-dependence of the stress as the acoustic wave crosses an interface between
materials of differing piezoelectric response. This technique is fundamentally
distinct from optical approaches to strain wave measurement, enabling passive
remote sensing of the dynamics of acoustic waves with ultrafast time resolution.
The new mechanism presented here enables nanostructure measurements not possible
using existing optical or x-ray approaches.
Harnessing second-order optical nonlinearities in compound semiconductors
Paper 7197-25 of Conference 7197
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 3:50 PM – 4:20 PM
Author(s): Amr S. Helmy, Payam Abolghasem, Bhavin Bijlani, Univ. of Toronto
(Canada)
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An overview of recent success in phase matching technologies of second order
nonlinear optical processes in compound semiconductors will be reported. The
technique used utilizes dispersion engineering in Bragg reflection waveguides (BRWs)
or 1-dimensoinal photonic bandgap structures to achieve phase matching between
the interacting waves. Nonlinear conversion efficiency matching what is
achievable in PPLN is obtained ridge BRWs fabricated in the GaAs/AlGaAs. Most
notable applications that would benefit from integrable ultrafast second order
optical nonlinearities include monolithically integrated optical parametric
oscillators, correlated photon pair sources and tunable frequency conversion
monolithic arrays.
Two-color pump-probe studies of intraminiband relaxation in doped GaAs/AlGaAs
superlattices
Paper 7214-60 of Conference 7214
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 4:08 PM – 4:36 PM
Author(s): Dominik Stehr, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara (United States) and
Forschungszentrum Dresden-Rossendorf e. V. (Germany); Martin Wagner, Harald
Schneider, Manfred Helm, Forschungszentrum Dresden-Rossendorf e. V. (Germany);
Aaron M. Andrews, Tomas Roch, Gottfried Strasser, Technische Univ. Wien
(Austria)
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Two-color infrared pump-probe experiments are performed to investigate the
miniband relaxation dynamics of electrons in doped GaAs/AlGaAs superlattices. By
this technique we are able to separate the different contributions from inter-
and intraminiband relaxation to the transient behavior after ultrafast
excitation. The intraminiband relaxation is studied for different miniband
widths, below and above the optical phonon energy of GaAs. For minibands wider
than this critical value we find fast relaxation, nearly constant for different
excitation intensities whereas for narrow minibands, a strong temperature and
intensity dependence of the relaxation is found.
Nanoplasmonics
Date: Thursday, 29 January 2009
Time: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Author(s): Mark I. Stockman, Georgia State Univ. (United States)
No abstract available Add to My Schedule
Time-gated optical imaging to detect positive prostate cancer margins
Paper 7161B-204 of Conference 7161B
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 11:20 AM – 11:40 AM
Author(s): George Alexandrakis, Nimit L. Patel, Zi-Jing Lin, The Univ. of Texas
at Arlington (United States); Jeffrey A. Cadeddu, The Univ. of Texas
Southwestern Medical Ctr. at Dallas (United States); Hanli Liu, The Univ. of
Texas at Arlington (United States)
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We will demonstrate the feasibility of using multi-modal time-gated optical
imaging, i.e. time-resolved light reflectance and auto-fluorescence life-time
imaging performed by an ultrafast ICCD (Intensified Charge-Coupled Device)
imaging system to enable surgeons to detect positive tumor margins with high
sensitivity and specificity over the entire resected prostate. Results from
animal experiments as well as ex vivo human prostates will be presented that
will demonstrate the feasibility of identifying differences in such optical
signals between prostate cancer and control tissues. We will also discuss the
use of classification algorithms to identify cancerous regions with greater
accuracy than individual images would.
High volume confinement in two-photon fluorescence correlation spectroscopy with
radially polarized light
Paper 7185-12 of Conference 7185
Date: Saturday, 24 January 2009
Time: 12:30 PM – 12:50 PM
Author(s): Denis A. Ivanov, Vladislav I. Shcheslavskiy, Iwan Märki, Ecole
Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland); Marcel Leutenegger,
Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysical Chemistry (Germany); Theo Lasser, Ecole
Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland)
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This paper presents theoretical and experimental investigation of a two-photon
fluorescence correlation spectroscopy setup where a tightly focussed evanescent
field is produced by total-internal reflection objective lens. The motivation of
this investigation is to get attoliter detection volumes in FCS and expand the
working range of single-molecule experiments to biologically relevant
concentrations. The compatibility of a spatial light modulator with ultrafast
lasers allowed us for the first time to take the advantage of nonlinear optical
contrast mechanisms to suppress the side-lobe energy specific for radial
polarization and reduce the effective excited volume compared to one-photon
evanescent wave excitation in FCS.
Dynamics of photoexcited coherent phonon in Bi2Te3, Sb2Te3, and Bi2Te3/Sb2Te3
superlattice
Paper 7214-8 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 11:39 AM – 12:07 PM
Author(s): Xianfan Xu, Yaguo Wang, Purdue Univ. (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Non-equilibrium A1g longitudinal optical phonons in Bi2Te3, Sb2Te3, and
Bi2Te3/Sb2Te3 superlattice are coherently excited by ultrafast pulses. Time
resolved reflectivity measurements show vibrations around A1g optical phonon
modes. The scattering rates due to interactions with incoherent phonon and
interfaces at room temperature are derived by measuring the pump fluence
dependent scattering rate of non-equilibrium A1g coherent phonon. The band
structure is found to be transiently modified by the photoexcited carriers, and
the energy coupling from photoexcited electrons to the lattice through coherent
phonon vibration is more efficient and faster at higher pump fluence.
Study of high temperature stable FBGs fabricated in H2 loaded and unloaded
SMF-28 fiber
Paper 7212-13 of Conference 7212
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 3:00 PM – 3:20 PM
Author(s): Christopher W. Smelser, Dan Grobnic, Stephen J. Mihailov,
Communications Research Ctr. Canada (Canada)
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High reflectivity fiber Bragg gratings are written with ultrafast infrared
radiation in H2 loaded SMF-28 fiber that retain in excess of 60 percent of their
index change at 1000 C using writing intensities below the damage threshold of
the fiber. The reflectivity after annealing (>-15 dB transmission loss at the
Bragg resonance) and index modulation ( ) in these devices is significantly
higher than what can be achieved with UV devices such as Type II, Type IIA and
chemical composition gratings. In this study the stability of these devices is
compared to that of gratings fabricated in unloaded SMF-28 fiber.
Latest advances in ultra-fast laser sources for multi photon microscopy
Paper 7183-53 of Conference 7183
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 10:30 AM – 10:45 AM
Author(s): Philip G. Smith, Newport Spectra-Physics (United States)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The advent of compact, fully automated, and widely wavelength-tunable ultrafast
oscillators has triggered an explosive growth in their use in a broad array of
multiphoton imaging techniques. Over the past decade laser manufacturers have
constantly improved the performance characteristics of these sources to meet the
requirements of the user community. We will review the latest advances at
Newport / Spectra-Physics in this field and discuss new ways of optimizing key
parameters for efficient deep-tissue fluorescence generation, including
turn-key, automated second order dispersion compensation that allows for
optimization of the pulse width at the sample over a wide wavelength range,
without compromising beam pointing and other critical beam parameters.
Transient behaviors of surface plasmon coupling with a light emitter
Paper 7214-45 of Conference 7214
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009
Time: 4:16 PM – 4:44 PM
Author(s): Wen-Hung Chuang, Jyh-Yang Wang, Yean-Woei Kiang, Chih-Chung Yang,
National Taiwan Univ. (Taiwan)
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The ultrafast behaviors of the dipole couplings with a grating-perturbed
resonant SPP, an LSP, and a grating-assisted SPP are numerically demonstrated.
Either SPP or LSP coupling can be built in 3-7 fs. At a far-field position, the
signal is received after a time delay of propagation plus a certain time period
for the buildup of the dipole coupling system. The LSP coupling system decays
through radiation and dissipation with time constants of 5-8 fs. The
grating-assisted SPP coupling system decays in two stages, including the first
stage of outward energy transport and the second stage of system relaxation.
Integration of micro-optics and microfluidics in a glass chip by fs-laser for
opto-fluidic applications
Paper 7202-1 of Conference 7202
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 8:20 AM – 8:50 AM
Author(s): Roberto Osellame, Rebeca Martinez Vazquez, Paolo Laporta, Roberta
Ramponi, Giulio Cerullo, Politecnico di Milano (Italy)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
The combination of microoptics and microfluidics, also known as optofluidics, is
raising an increasing interest. Recently, directly buried high quality
waveguides and microfluidic channels have been fabricated by femtosecond lasers.
The main advantage of this technique is its three-dimensional capability
providing high flexibility in intersecting the optical and fluidic structures.
In this work, a few optofluidic devices based on this technology will be
discussed. On one hand, the integration of an ultrafast optical switch is
demonstrated. On the other hand, the integration of optical waveguides and Mach-Zehnder
interferometers for sensing of biomolecules in a capillary electrophoresis chip
will be presented.
Compact cavity dumped broadband laser oscillator
Paper 7193-63 of Conference 7193
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Time: 1:30 PM – 1:50 PM
Author(s): Estelle Coadou, Coherent, Inc. (United States); D. Neumeyer, APE GmbH
(Germany); Bojan Resan, Coherent, Inc. (United States); Ingo Rimke, APE GmbH
(Germany)
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Recent development of optically-pumped semiconductor laser (OPSL) technology
provide a Ti:sapphire pump source that reduces cost and complexity while
maintaining a high standard of performance and reliability. In this paper we
report on the performance of a compact (930 x 330 x 170 mm³), cavity-dumped
ultrafast Ti:Sapphire laser oscillator pumped by an (OPSL) and using negative
dispersion mirrors. The system generates broadband pulses of up to 30nJ pulse
energy at 1 MHz repetition rate, bandwidth of >75nm, and compressed pulse
duration of <20fs. The system is rep-rate tunable from single-shot to 10MHz.
Cavity quantum electrodynamics in the ultrastrong coupling regime
Paper 7214-1 of Conference 7214
Date: Sunday, 25 January 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 8:28 AM
Author(s): Cristiano Ciuti, Univ. Paris 7-Denis Diderot (France)
Show Abstract Add to My Schedule
Several experiments have recently demonstrated the strong coupling between a
planar microcavity photon mode and an intersubband transition in doped quantum
wells[1-4]. Research in this new field is dealing with several interesting
topics, including the electrical control[2], detection[3] and injection[4,5] of
intersubband cavity polaritons, as well as the ultrastrong coupling cavity
quantum electrodynamics. Indeed, it has been shown theoretically that in this
kind of semiconductor microcavities one can reach an unconventional ultra-strong
coupling regime[6], i.e. the vacuum Rabi frequency can be comparable to the
transition frequency. In this unusual regime, the quantum ground state is a
squeezed vacuum containing correlated photon pairs[6]. If the cavity parameters
are time-independent, the photon pairs in the quantum ground state are
unobservable outside. Instead, a non-adiabatic time-modulation of the cavity
vacuum is able to release the virtual photon pairs and produce a radiation out
of the quantum vacuum[6,7]. Promisingly, recent ultrafast experiments[8] have
demonstrated that it is possible to achieve a non-adiabatic modulation of
ultrastrong light-matter coupling. In this invited talk, I will review
predictions[6,7] for the quantum vacuum radiation phenomena in the ultrastrong
coupling regime, pointing out fascinating perspectives in this new research
field.
Monitoring changes of proteins and lipids by Raman spectroscopy in laser tissue
welding
Paper 7175-3 of Conference 7175
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009
Time: 8:50 AM – 9:10 AM
Author(s): Cheng-Hui Liu, Wubao B. Wang, Alexandra N. Alimova, Vidyasagar
Srirmoju, Vladimir Kartazayev, Robert R. Alfano, City College/CUNY (United
States)
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Monitoring changes of proteins and lipids by Raman spectroscopy in laser tissue
welding
C.-H. Liu, W.B. Wang, S.A. Alimova, V. Sriramoju,
V. Kartazayev and R.R. Alfano,
Institute for Ultrafast Spectroscopy and Lasers, Department of Physics, the City
College and of
the City University of New York, New York, New York 10031
The changes of Raman spectrum of porcine aorta tissue before and after laser
tissue welding by 1445nm laser beam were studied. Raman spectra were measured
for normal and welded tissue in both tunica adventitia and intima sides. The
vibrational modes at the peak and shoulder positions (1256 cm-1 and 1301 cm-1)
of amide III in the normal tissue were found to be shifted to 1269cm-1 and
1327cm-1, respectively, in the welded adventitia side tissue. The Raman
characteristic spectra were analyzed as a composite of standard chemical assays
using the linear regression fitting method. The relatively composition changes
of proteins (Collagen types I, III, V and Elastin) and lipids for welded tissue
were modeled as compared with the normal tissue. Collagen type III relatively
decreased and others relatively increased in the adventitia side of welded
tissue. These results are consisted with fluorescence spectral study on tissues
previously reported.
Submit to: SPIE Photonics West 2009, 24-29 January 2009, San Jose, California,
USA
Section: Optical Interactions with Tissue and Cells XX (BO201),
Topics: Laser welding and soldering of tissue