Next Article in Journal
The Role of Hyaluronic Acid in Intervertebral Disc Regeneration
Previous Article in Journal
EVAR-eaSE: An Easy-to-Use Software for Planning Sac Embolization in EndoVascular Aneurysm Repair Procedure
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Highly Sensitive Complicated Spectrum Analysis in Micro-Bubble Resonators Using the Orthogonal Demodulation Pound–Drever–Hall Technique

1
Key Lab for Micro and Nanophotonic Structures (Ministry of Education), Department of Optical Science and Engineering, School of Information Science and Engineering, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
2
Department of Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2020, 10(18), 6256; https://doi.org/10.3390/app10186256
Submission received: 13 August 2020 / Revised: 4 September 2020 / Accepted: 6 September 2020 / Published: 9 September 2020
(This article belongs to the Section Optics and Lasers)

Abstract

:

Featured Application

The presented method can increase the measurement range in differential resonance sensing, allowing differential sensing of overlapped resonances.

Abstract

Whispering gallery mode micro-bubble optical cavities are asymmetrical ellipsoids in experimental settings, which makes their modes nondegenerate. A complicated dense spectrum is thus generated. Overlapping and coupled resonances exist in this dense spectrum. In this study, we determined that the orthogonal demodulation Pound-Drever-Hall technique can be used to analyze complicated resonances. Using this method, overlapping weak and strong coupling resonances can be analyzed. Compared to spectrum simplification and the ab initio theory of Fano resonances, this method is repeatable, simple, sensitive, and accurate. The method can increase the measurement range of differential resonance sensing, thus allowing the differential sensing of overlapped resonances.

1. Introduction

During recent decades, whispering gallery mode optical cavities [1] have attracted substantial attention because of their benefits of high-quality factors, small mode volumes, and high energy density. They have been widely utilized in many fields, such as cavity quantum electrodynamics (CQED) [1], nonlinear optics [2], microcavity sensors [3,4,5,6,7], optomechanics [8], microcavity lasers [9], optical signal processing [10], and single molecule detection [3,4,5,11]. Micro-bubble resonators (MBRs) [12] have become an especially important type of optical microcavities. These sensors facilitate optofluidic [6] and pressure sensing [13] due to their hollow structure. However, MBRs are asymmetrical ellipsoids in experiments, which causes their resonances to nondegenerate. As a consequence, a complicated dense spectrum is generated, and the resonances may overlap or couple with each other [14]. The two resonances have three relations in the dense spectrum according to the relationship between the coupling coefficient (g) and the critical coupling strength (κT): overlap (g = 0), weak coupling (g < κT, Fano resonance [15,16] and electromagnetically induced transparency resonance [17,18]), and strong coupling (g > κT, mode splitting [19]). A dense spectrum benefits cavity quantum electrodynamics [1] and nonlinear optics [2]. However, tracking and identifying the resonances in sensing applications are an essential task. Many efforts have been made, such as mode simplification [20,21,22,23,24] and the ab initio theory of Fano resonances [25], to simplify and analyze the spectrum. However, mode simplification is unrepeatable, costly, and complex. The ab initio theory of Fano resonances only utilizes the amplitude of resonance, and can only discriminate simple resonances. Thus, analysis of the dense and complicated spectrum remains a challenge.
In this work, we propose a new method based on the orthogonal demodulated Pound-Drever-Hall [26,27] (OD-PDH) technique to analyze the dense and complicated spectrum directly. The Pound-Drever-Hall (PDH) technique can be used in laser frequency stabilization [26,27] and highly sensitive sensing applications, e.g., nanoparticles [11], pressure [13], angular velocity [28], acceleration [29], and relativity applications [30]. The discriminating signal [27,28] from the PDH system depends on an optical field rather than light intensity, so contains both amplitude and phase information of the resonance. The PDH system transforms the sharp imaginary information of the resonance and the slope information of the resonance into discriminating signals. Any tiny change of resonance will significantly influence the discriminating signals. Therefore, it can be used in highly sensitive resonance analysis. The OD-PDH technique [31,32] is an improved PDH technique that can eliminate the phase difference between local oscillation and detection signal, and stabilize the discriminating signal. Using this method, the overlapping weak and strong coupling resonance parameters can be obtained accurately. Compared to other methods, this method is repeatable, simple, sensitive, and accurate. It can also increase the measurement range in differential resonance sensing, thus allowing differential sensing of overlapped resonances.

2. Principle and Setup

In classical PDH technique theory, we can obtain the bipolar voltage wavelength discriminating signal (I-term and Q-term signals), and I0(ω) and Q0(ω) can be expressed as [27]:
I 0 ( ω )   = k P 0 J 0 ( β ) J 1 ( β ) Re [ R ( ω ) R * ( ω + ω m ) R * ( ω ) R ( ω ω m ) ]
Q 0 ( ω )   = k P 0 J 0 ( β ) J 1 ( β ) Im [ R ( ω ) R * ( ω + ω m ) R * ( ω ) R ( ω ω m ) ]
where the phase difference (φ) between the detection signal and the local oscillation signal is 0 and π/2, respectively. ω is the laser angular frequency; ωm is the angular frequency of the signal input into the phase electro-optical modulator (PM) (ωm = 2πfm, fm = 50 MHz); I0(ω) is the in-phase term; Q0(ω) is the quadrature term; k represents the scale factor containing the light power-voltage conversion coefficient, the insertion loss in every electronic element, and the gain of the amplifier; P0 represents the laser power; J0 and J1 are the first kind of 0- and 1-order Bessel function; β is the modulation degree (β = πV/Vπ); V is the signal of the peak-to-peak value voltage input into the PM; Vπ is the half-wave voltage of the PM; and R(ω) is the complex spectral response of the resonance. When the bandwidth of the resonance is much larger than the PM modulation frequency (i.e., low quality factor, Q), the sidebands can be modulated by the resonance, and ωm is negligible, thus R*(ω + ωm) − R*(ω) ≈ [dR*(ω)/dω]ωm, R(ω) − R(ω − ωm) = [dR(ω)/dω]ωm; the I-term and Q-term signals can be expressed as [27]:
I 0 ( ω )   k P 0 J 0 ( β ) J 1 ( β ) [ d | R ( ω ) | 2 / d ω ] ω m ,
Q 0 ( ω )   0 .
By comparison, when the bandwidth of resonance is much less than the PM modulation frequency (i.e., high Q), the sideband light is totally transmitted, thus R(ω ± ωm) ≈ 1 and R*(ω ± ωm) ≈ 1, and the I-term and Q-term signals can be expressed as [27]:
I 0 ( ω )   0 ,
Q 0 ( ω )   2 k P 0 J 0 ( β ) J 1 ( β ) Im [ R ( ω ) ] .
When the PM modulation frequency is close to the bandwidth of resonance, the I-term and Q-term signals exist simultaneously. The [d|R(ω)|2]/dω]ωm (low Q condition) and 2Im[R(ω)] (high Q condition) are both sharp dispersion curves like the PDH discriminating frequency curve [27]. The PDH system transforms the sharp imaginary information of the resonance and the slope information of the resonance into the I-term and Q-term signals. Any tiny change of resonance will significantly influence the I-term and Q-term signals. Therefore, the I-term and Q-term signals can be used to analyze the complicated resonances that the transmitted spectrum cannot be used to analyze. However, the φ is an unknown value in the experiment, and the phase difference will influence the I-term and Q-term signals [31]. Here, we use the orthogonal demodulation technique [31,32] to eliminate the phase difference and make the OD-PDH spectrum (IQ curve) stable. In sensing applications, this technique can help obtain the highest sensing sensitivity. In this experiment, we use Equation (7):
I Q ( ω ) = I 0 2 ( ω ) + Q 0 2 ( ω )
to obtain the IQ curve, which does not relate to φ. For a single resonance, R(ω) can be expressed as [33]:
R ( ω ) = 1 2 ω 0 / q e ω 0 / q 0 + ω 0 / q e + 2 i ( ω ω 0 ) ,
where ω is the laser angular frequency, ω0 is the resonant angular frequency, q0 is the intracavity Q, and qe is the external cavity Q. When two resonances overlap or weakly couple, R(ω) can be described by [34]:
R ( ω ) = 1 + 2 κ 01 X 2 + κ 02 X 1 + 2 Re ( g ) κ e 1 κ e 2 X 1 X 2 g 2 ,
where κ0n = ωn/(2q0n), κen = ωn/(2qen), qn = (q0n−1 + qen−1)−1, Xn = −κ0nκen + i(ω − ωn), ωn = 2πfn (n = 1, 2), and ∆λd = c/f1 − c/f2; κ0n is the intracavity decay rate of resonances; κen is the external cavity decay rate of the two resonances; fn is the resonant frequency of the two resonances; q0n is the intracavity Q of the two resonances; qen is the external cavity Q of the two resonances; qn is the resonance total Q of the two resonances; g is the coupling coefficient; ωn is the angular resonant frequency of the two resonances; ω is laser angular frequency; c is the light velocity in a vacuum; and ∆λd represents the two resonances’ distances as wavelengths. The parameters q0n, qen, fn (n = 1, 2), and g can be obtained by fitting the IQ curve. The other parameters can be derived by the fitting parameters. When two resonances strongly couple, according to the coupled mode theory, the coupled mode equations can be written as [14]:
X 3 E 3 g 1 E 4 + 2 i κ e 3 E in = 0 ,
X 4 E 4 g 1 E 3 = 0 ,
where κ0p = ωp/(2q0p), κep = ωp/(2qep), qp = (q0p−1 + qep−1)−1, Xp = i(κ0p + κep) + (ω − ωp), ωp = 2πfp (p = 3, 4), and ∆λd2 = c/f3 − c/f4; Ein is the optical field amplitude of the input light; Ep (p = 3, 4) is the optical field amplitude of the two resonances; κ0p is the intracavity decay rate of the two resonances; κep is the external cavity decay rate of the two resonances; fp is the resonant frequency of the two resonances; q0p is the intracavity Q of the two resonances; qep is the external cavity Q of the two resonances; qp is the resonance total Q of the two resonances; g1 is the coupling coefficient; and ωp is the angular resonant frequency of the two resonances. The optical field amplitude of the output light (Eout) can be described by:
E out = E in + κ e 3 E 3 .
The R(ω) can be described by:
R ( ω ) = E out E in = 1 + 2 i κ e 3 X 4 g 1 2 X 3 X 4 .
The parameters q0p, qep, fp (p = 3, 4), and g1 can be obtained by fitting the IQ curve. The other parameters can be derived by the fitting parameters. The final IQ curve expression (Equation (7)) can be obtained by inserting Equation (8) (single resonance), Equation (9) (overlap and weak couple), or Equation (13) (strongly couple) into Equations (1) and (2), and then inserting Equations (1) and (2) into Equation (7). The resonance expression can be obtained by calculating the square modulus of Equations (8) (single resonance), (9) (overlap and weak couple), or (13) (strong couple). The coefficient of determination (COD, R-square) was used to evaluate the fitting results. The data (x, y) = (x1, y1), (x2, y2), …, (xm, ym) were obtained in measurement. The COD is defined as:
C O D = m ( y ^ m y ¯ ) 2 / m ( y m y ¯ ) 2 ,
where y m , y ^ m , and y ¯ represent the experimental data, fitting data, and average of the experimental data, respectively. The COD ranges from 0 to 1. A larger COD indicates better fitting results. We define [14] |κ1κ2|/2 as the threshold (κT) and the regimes where g < κT and g > κT as the weak- and strong-driving regimes, respectively; κq (q = 1, 2) is the total decay rate of the two resonances.
In the experiment, the MBR was fabricated by heating pressurized silica capillaries [7]. Figure 1 provides a schematic of the orthogonal demodulation PDH technique. A tunable laser (1550 nm, Anritsu Tunics Plus CL; 850 nm, New Focus TLB 6716) was used to excite the MBR resonances. After passing through a polarization controller and a PM (850 nm, iXBlue NIR-MPX800-LN-P-P-FA-FA; 1550 nm, Thorlabs LN53-10-S-F-F-BNL), the laser beam was coupled into and out of the MBR via a taper fiber. A photoelectric detector (PD; 850 nm, Thorlabs PDA10A2; 1550 nm, Thorlabs PDA10CF-CE) connected to a data acquisition (DAQ, NI PCIe6351) card and IQ demodulation circuits (ADI LT5584) was used to detect the transmission light. A syringe pump was used to inject air into the MBR, and a pressure sensor (0.25%; full scale, 2 bar) monitored the MBR’s inner pressure. A high frequency function signal generator (Keysight 33622A) generated the sine wave signal to drive the PM and the signal was also used as the local oscillation signal to demodulate the detected signal from the PD. The DAQ card recorded the signal from the PD (transmitted spectrum), IQ demodulation circuits (the I-term and Q-term signal), and pressure sensor (pressure), and generated a triangular wave signal to sweep the laser frequency simultaneously. In the experiment, the laser was used to sweep the laser frequency linearly as a triangular wave signal. The PD transformed the light signal to a voltage signal. The DAQ card recorded the signal as the laser frequency changed. Then, we obtained the transmitted spectrum. The IQ signal was obtained after the signal was processed by the IQ-demodulation circuits.

3. Experimental Results

Figure 2a plots standard a single optical resonance (blue scattered line), its IQ curve (black scattered line), its fitting IQ curve (red solid line), and its replotted resonance (magenta solid line). An MBR with a diameter of 220 µm and a wall thickness of 17 µm was excited with 1550 nm tunable laser via a tapered fiber whose diameter was about 2.5 µm. The IQ curve has two peaks that sit symmetrically centered on the optical resonance. The intracavity Q (q0 = 1.20 × 106), external cavity Q (qe = 1.14 × 106), total Q (qa = (q0−1 + qe−1)−1 = 5.84 × 105) and resonant frequency (fa = 1.94 × 1014 Hz) can be obtained by fitting the IQ curve with a single resonance IQ expression. Total Q (qb = 5.84 × 105) and resonant frequency (fb = 1.94 × 1014 Hz) can also be obtained by fitting the transmitted spectrum directly. The results agree with each other and prove that the IQ curve can be used to analyze the spectrum. Figure 2b plots an asymmetrical spectrum (black scattered line) and its fitting resonances (overlapping, red solid line; coupled, yellow dashed line). An MBR with a diameter of 276 µm and a wall thickness of 4 µm was excited with an 850 nm tunable laser via a tapered fiber whose diameter was about 2.5 µm. However, direct fitting of the spectrum via a two-resonance expression did not derive unique fitting parameters. Figure 2b gives the fitted spectrum with the two group parameters. The two groups’ different parameters listed in Table 1, however, provided an excellent fitting. The coefficient of determination parameters (COD, R-Square) were both above 0.980. Thus, we used the OD-PDH technique to analyze the resonance. Figure 2c plots the spectrum (blue scattered line) in Figure 2b and its IQ curve (black scattered line), fitting curve of the two resonances in Figure 2b and its replotted IQ curve (overlapping, red solid line; coupled, yellow dashed line). We used the fitted parameters from Figure 2b to replot the IQ curve. The CODs of the overlapping and coupled replotted IQ curves were 0.981 and 0.937, respectively. Clearly, the overlapping replotted IQ curves agree with the experimental spectrum. This proves that the IQ curve can discriminate asymmetrical resonance. Figure 2d plots the spectrum (blue scattered line) in Figure 2b and its IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curve and its replotted two resonances (overlapping, red solid line; couple, yellow dashed line). To verify that the IQ fitting is valid, we used the two-resonant IQ expression to fit the IQ curve. The IQ curve could be well fitted by the two groups’ different parameters listed in Table 1 (CODs > 0.996). Then, we used the fitting parameters to replot the resonances. The COD of the overlapping replotted resonance was 0.968, while the COD of the coupled parameters was only 0.790. Similarly, the overlapped replotted curve better agrees with the experimental spectrum. These fitting and replotting curves prove the IQ curve can confirm that the overlapping parameters are the correct results. To prove that the spectrum in Figure 2b contains the two resonances, we injected air into the MBR to execute pressure tuning. Figure 2e,f shows the resonance (blue scattered line) gradually separating and eventually becoming two resonances, and its IQ curves (black scattered line). Different orders of resonances have different pressure sensitivity levels; the resonances shift through different wavelengths and separate gradually as the MBR’s internal pressure changes. The pressure values are 0.387, 0.411, and 0.579 bar in Figure 2b,e,f, respectively. The pressure tuning proves that the asymmetrical spectrum contains two resonances. Figure 2f plots the two separate resonances (blue scattered line), the IQ curves (black scattered line), fitted IQ curves, replotted resonances (red solid line), fitted resonances, and replotted IQ curves (yellow dashed line). To verify the fitting results above, we fitted the IQ curve, replotted the resonance, fitted the resonance, and replotted the IQ curve. The fitting and replotting results (g = 0 MHz) listed in Table 1 agree with the previous results. The CODs of the IQ and the transmitted replotted curve are 0.862 and 0.863, respectively. The IQ curve of the low-quality resonance features noise, so its COD value is not significantly better. The process proves the validity of the OD-PDH technique in analyzing overlapping asymmetrical spectra. Note that we obtained g = 0 MHz. This naturally reveals that the two resonances simply overlap.
Figure 3 gives another example of the asymmetrical mode (black scattered line). Again, we can fit the asymmetrical resonance (overlapping, red solid line; coupled, yellow dashed line) in Figure 3a with the two-resonance expression and derive two group parameters as listed in Table 2 (CODs > 0.991). Figure 3b plots the spectrum in Figure 3a (blue scattered line) and its IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted resonances and replotted IQ curves (overlapping, red solid line; coupled, yellow dashed line). Using the two group parameters to reproduce the IQ curve, the group of parameters with g = 1.20 × 104 MHz in Figure 3b fit the spectrum well (replotted coupled curve COD, 0.997; replotted overlapping curve COD, 0.645), which means that the two modes couple. Figure 3c plots the spectrum in Figure 3a (blue scattered line) and its IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curves and replotted resonances (overlapping, red solid line; coupled, yellow dashed line). We can also fit the IQ curves and generate two groups of parameters (COD > 0.998), and then use those parameters to reproduce the spectrum in Figure 3c. This result also demonstrates that the group of parameters with g = 1.20 × 104 MHz fits the spectrum. (replotted coupled transmitted spectrum COD, 0.994; replotted overlapping transmitted spectrum COD, 0.893). To prove that the asymmetrical resonance is a coupled resonance, as we did above, we injected air into the MBR to tune the resonance; Figure 3d plots the resonance when the pressure ranged from 0.215 to 0.519 bar. A single example of asymmetrical resonance may be coupled and overlapping resonance. After pressure tuning, the resonance did not separate and the resonance shifted and maintained its asymmetry. These phenomena prove that the resonance is coupled with a low-Q resonance. Note that g > 0, which satisfies g < κT (κT = 1.31 × 104); this reveals that the two resonances are weakly coupled. This process proves the validity of the OD-PDH technique in analyzing weakly coupled resonances.
Figure 4a shows two resonances (blue scattered line) that are symmetrical and appear to be two independent resonances, and their IQ curves (black scattered line), when the pressure is 0.229 bar. We used a strongly coupled expression to fit both the IQ curve (red solid line) and the spectrum (yellow dashed line) (IQ COD, 0.985; spectrum COD, 0.996), and used the fitted parameters to reproduce the spectrum (red solid line) and IQ curve (yellow dashed line) (replotted IQ curve COD, 0.983; replotted transmitted spectrum COD, 0.933). The results are summarized in Table 3. The spectrum and IQ curve were accurately reproduced. Note that only one group of fitting parameters can be derived, with g > κT, revealing that the two resonances are strongly coupled. To check that the two resonances are coupled, we injected air into the MBR to tune the resonance. Figure 4b plots the successive change of resonances as the pressure increases from 0.229 to 0.522 bar. Repeating the above fitting process, we found that the two resonances become closer to each other when g decreases and g > κT. This implies that the two resonances are most likely strongly coupled. This process proves that the OD-PDH technique is valid for strongly coupled resonances.
Finally, we provide a discussion to explain which model should be used. Strong coupling will lead to mode splitting and generate two separate resonances. Thus, the asymmetrical single resonance can only be an overlapping or weak-coupling resonance. The weak-coupling model should be used. Two separate resonances may originate from two strong-coupling and overlapping resonances and will generate four peaks in the IQ curve. We can roughly determine the coupling status by the IQ curve. If the two center peaks are lower than the two side peaks in the IQ curve, the two resonances are either simply overlapping or weakly coupled. The weak-coupling model should be used. If the two center peaks are higher than the two side peaks in the IQ curve, the two resonances are strongly coupled. Therefore, the strong-coupling model should be used. Most importantly, if the weak (strong) coupling model is used for strongly (weakly) coupled resonance, the experimental curves cannot be well fitted.

4. Conclusions

In summary, an OD-PDH system was built in this study. Based on this system, a method used to analyze the complicated resonances in MBR was presented. This method is repeatable, simple, sensitive, and accurate. The OD-PDH system can eliminate the phase difference between the local oscillation and detection signal, and generate a stable IQ curve. The IQ curve relates to the optical field rather than the light intensity, and contains both the amplitude and the phase information of the complex transmitted spectrum. The OD-PDH system transforms the sharp imaginary information of the resonance and the slope information of the resonance into the IQ curve. Any tiny change of resonance will influence the IQ curves significantly. Thus, the IQ curves can be used to analyze the complicated resonances that the transmitted spectrum cannot be used to analyze. We used the IQ curve to analyze the asymmetrical resonance caused by overlapping and weak-coupling resonances, which cannot be discriminated by the transmitted spectrum. Moreover, we analyzed the strong-coupling resonance, which may be mistakenly treated as an overlapping resonance. The resonance parameters were obtained accurately by fitting the IQ curve and validated by replotting the spectrum. This method can increase the measurement range in differential resonance sensing, thus allowing the differential sensing of overlapped resonances.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.H. and L.X.; data curation, S.L. and B.L.; formal analysis, J.H., B.L. and L.X.; funding acquisition, L.L. and L.X.; investigation, J.H., B.L. and L.X.; methodology, J.H., L.L. and L.X.; project administration, L.L. and L.X.; resources, L.L. and X.W.; software, J.H.; supervision, L.L.; validation, S.L. and Z.G.; visualization, J.H. and Z.G.; writing—original draft, J.H.; writing—review and editing, L.X. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC), grant number 11874122, 11474070, 61327008 and 11074051 and the Doctoral Program of Higher Education, grant number 20130071130004.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Vahala, K.J. Optical microcavities. Nature 2003, 424, 839–846. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Lu, Q.J.; Liu, S.; Wu, X.; Liu, L.; Xu, L.Y. Stimulated Brillouin laser and frequency comb generation in high-Q microbubble resonators. Opt. Lett. 2016, 41, 1736–1739. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Vollmer, F.; Arnold, S. Whispering-gallery-mode biosensing: Label-free detection down to single molecules. Nat. Methods 2008, 5, 591–596. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Armani, A.M.; Kulkarni, R.P.; Fraser, S.E.; Flagan, R.C.; Vahala, K.J. Label-free, single-molecule detection with optical microcavities. Science 2007, 317, 783–787. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  5. He, L.N.; Özdemir, Ş.K.; Zhu, J.G.; Kim, W.; Yang, L. Detecting single viruses and nanoparticles using whispering gallery microlasers. Nat. Nanotechnol. 2011, 6, 428–432. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  6. Zhang, X.W.; Liu, L.Y.; Xu, L. Ultralow sensing limit in optofluidic micro-bottle resonator biosensor by self-referenced differential-mode detection scheme. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2014, 104, 033703. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Li, M.; Wu, X.; Liu, L.Y.; Fan, X.D.; Xu, L. Self-referencing optofluidic ring resonator sensor for highly sensitive biomolecular detection. Anal. Chem. 2013, 85, 9328–9332. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Kippenberg, T.J.; Vahala, K.J. Cavity opto-mechanics. Opt. Express 2007, 15, 17172–17205. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Lu, Q.J.; Wu, X.; Liu, L.Y.; Xu, L. Mode-selective lasing in high-Q polymer microbottle resonators. Opt. Express 2015, 23, 22740–22745. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Liu, W.; Li, M.; Guzzon, R.S.; Norberg, E.J.; Parker, J.S.; Lu, M.; Coldren, L.A.; Yao, J. A fully reconfigurable photonic integrated signal processor. Nat. Photonics 2016, 10, 190–195. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Swaim, J.D.; Knittel, J.; Bowen, W.P. Detection of nanoparticles with a frequency locked whispering gallery mode microresonator. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2013, 102, 183106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  12. Sumetsky, M.; Dulashko, Y.; Windeler, R. Optical microbubble resonator. Opt. Lett. 2010, 35, 898–900. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Madugani, R.; Yang, Y.; Le, V.H.; Ward, J.M.; Chormaic, S.N. Linear laser tuning using a pressure-sensitive microbubble resonator. IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 2016, 28, 1134–1137. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Peng, B.; Özdemir, Ş.K.; Chen, W.J.; Nori, F.; Yang, L. What is and what is not electromagnetically induced transparency in whispering-gallery microcavities. Nat. Commun. 2014, 5, 5082. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Fano, U. Effects of configuration interaction on intensities and phase shifts. Phys. Rev. 1961, 124, 1866. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Li, B.B.; Xiao, Y.F.; Zou, C.L.; Liu, Y.C.; Jiang, X.F.; Chen, Y.L.; Li, Y.; Gong, Q. Experimental observation of Fano resonance in a single whispering-gallery microresonator. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2011, 98, 021116. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Kelly, W.R.; Dutton, Z.; Schlafer, J.; Mookerji, B.; Ohki, T.A.; Kline, J.S.; Pappas, D.P. Direct observation of coherent population trapping in a superconducting artificial atom. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2010, 104, 163601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  18. Boller, K.J.; Imamoğlu, A.; Harris, S.E. Observation of electromagnetically induced transparency. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1991, 66, 2593. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  19. Autler, S.H.; Townes, C.H. Stark Effect in Rapidly Varying Fields. Phys. Rev. 1955, 100, 703–722. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Liew, S.F.; Red-ding, B.; Ge, L.; Solomon, G.S.; Cao, H. Active control of emission directionality of semiconductor microdisk lasers. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2014, 104, 231108. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  21. Nasir, M.N.M.; Ding, M.; Murugan, G.S.; Zervas, M.N. Microtaper Fiber Excitation Effects in Bottle Microresonators. Laser Resonators, Microresonators, and Beam Control XV; International Society for Optics and Photonics: San Francisco, CA, USA, 2013; Volume 8600, p. 860020. [Google Scholar]
  22. Murugan, G.S.; Wilkinson, J.S.; Zervas, M.N. Selective excitation of whispering gallery modes in a novel bottle microresonator. Opt. Express 2009, 17, 11916–11925. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  23. Savchenkov, A.; Matsko, A.; Strekalov, D.; Ilchenko, V.; Maleki, L. Mode filtering in optical whispering gallery resonators. Electron. Lett. 2005, 41, 1. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Ding, M.; Senthil Murugan, G.; Brambilla, G.; Zervas, M.N. Whispering gallery mode selection in optical bottle microresonators. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2012, 100, 081108. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Gallinet, B.; Martin, O.J. Ab initio theory of Fano resonances in plasmonic nanostructures and metamaterials. Phys. Rev. B 2011, 83, 235427. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  26. Drever, R.; Hall, J.L.; Kowalski, F.; Hough, J.; Ford, G.; Munley, A.; Ward, H. Laser phase and frequency stabilization using an optical resonator. Appl. Phys. B 1983, 31, 97–105. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Black, E.D. An introduction to Pound-Drever-Hall laser frequency stabilization. Am. J. Phys. 2001, 69, 79–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  28. Lu, Y.; Zhang, J.J.; Ma, H.L.; Jin, Z.H. High-frequency Pound-Drever-Hall sensing of a short and high-finesse fiber ring resonator. In Proceedings of the 2016 15th International Conference on Optical Communications and Networks (ICOCN), Hangzhou, China, 24–27 September 2016; pp. 1–3. [Google Scholar]
  29. Barnes, J.; Li, S.J.; Goyal, A.; Abolmaesumi, P.; Mousavi, P.; Loock, H.-P. Broadband Vibration Detection in Tissue Phantoms Using a Fiber Fabry-Perot Cavity. IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. 2018, 65, 921–927. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Sanders, G.A.; Prentiss, M.G.; Ezekiel, S. Passive ring resonator method for sensitive inertial rotation measurements in geophysics and relativity. Opt. Lett. 1981, 6, 569–571. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Hu, J.L.; Liu, S.; Wu, X.; Liu, L.Y.; Xu, L. Orthogonal Demodulation Pound-Drever-Hall Technique for Ultra-Low Detection Limit Pressure Sensing. Sensors 2019, 19, 3223. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  32. Juan, S.; Mingxing, J.; Fei, J. Pound-Drever-Hall laser frequency locking technique based on orthogonal demodulation. Optik 2018, 168, 348–354. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Gorodetsky, M.L.; Ilchenko, V.S. Optical microsphere resonators: Optimal coupling to high-Q whispering-gallery modes. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 1999, 16, 147–154. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  34. Dong, C.H.; Zou, C.L.; Xiao, Y.F.; Cui, J.M.; Han, Z.F.; Guo, G.C. Modified transmission spectrum induced by two-mode interference in a single silica microsphere. J. Phys. B 2009, 42, 215401. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Setup schematic of the orthogonal demodulated Pound-Drever-Hall technique system. TL, tunable laser; PC, polarization controller; PM, phase electro-optical modulator; MBR, micro-bubble resonator; PD, photoelectric detector; DAQ, data acquisition card; IQ, I-term and Q-term signal; HFSG, high frequency function signal generator; PS, pressure sensor; SP, syringe pump; DS, detection signal; LS, local oscillation signal. IQ DC, IQ demodulation circuit. The inset (a) illustrates the IQ demodulation circuit detail. The inset (b) provides an image of the MBR.
Figure 1. Setup schematic of the orthogonal demodulated Pound-Drever-Hall technique system. TL, tunable laser; PC, polarization controller; PM, phase electro-optical modulator; MBR, micro-bubble resonator; PD, photoelectric detector; DAQ, data acquisition card; IQ, I-term and Q-term signal; HFSG, high frequency function signal generator; PS, pressure sensor; SP, syringe pump; DS, detection signal; LS, local oscillation signal. IQ DC, IQ demodulation circuit. The inset (a) illustrates the IQ demodulation circuit detail. The inset (b) provides an image of the MBR.
Applsci 10 06256 g001
Figure 2. (a) Standard single resonance transmitted spectrum (blue scattered line), its IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curve (red solid line) and replotted resonance (magenta solid line). (b) Experimental (black scattered line) and fitted (red solid line (g = 0), yellow dashed line (g = 1.19 × 104 MHz) spectrum at inner pressure of 0.387 bar. (c) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted resonances, and replotted IQ curves (red solid line (g = 0 MHz) and yellow dashed line (g = 1.19 × 104 MHz). (d) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curves and replotted resonances (red solid line (g = 0 MHz), and yellow dashed line (g = 3.76 × 103 MHz). (e) and (f) Experimental resonances (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line) at inner pressure of 0.411 bar and 0.579 bar, respectively, fitted and replotted curves (red solid line and yellow dashed line).
Figure 2. (a) Standard single resonance transmitted spectrum (blue scattered line), its IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curve (red solid line) and replotted resonance (magenta solid line). (b) Experimental (black scattered line) and fitted (red solid line (g = 0), yellow dashed line (g = 1.19 × 104 MHz) spectrum at inner pressure of 0.387 bar. (c) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted resonances, and replotted IQ curves (red solid line (g = 0 MHz) and yellow dashed line (g = 1.19 × 104 MHz). (d) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curves and replotted resonances (red solid line (g = 0 MHz), and yellow dashed line (g = 3.76 × 103 MHz). (e) and (f) Experimental resonances (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line) at inner pressure of 0.411 bar and 0.579 bar, respectively, fitted and replotted curves (red solid line and yellow dashed line).
Applsci 10 06256 g002
Figure 3. (a) Experimental (black scattered line) and fitted spectrum (red solid line, g = 0; yellow dashed line, g = 1.20 × 104 MHz). (b) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted spectrum and replotted IQ curves (red solid line, g = 0 MHz; yellow dashed line g = 1.20 × 104 MHz). (c) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curve and replotted resonances (red solid line g = 0 MHz; yellow dashed line g = 1.20 × 104 MHz). (d) Asymmetrical resonance shifts as the MBR internal pressure (0.215, 0.320, 0.416, and 0.519 bar) increases.
Figure 3. (a) Experimental (black scattered line) and fitted spectrum (red solid line, g = 0; yellow dashed line, g = 1.20 × 104 MHz). (b) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted spectrum and replotted IQ curves (red solid line, g = 0 MHz; yellow dashed line g = 1.20 × 104 MHz). (c) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line) and IQ curve (black scattered line), fitted IQ curve and replotted resonances (red solid line g = 0 MHz; yellow dashed line g = 1.20 × 104 MHz). (d) Asymmetrical resonance shifts as the MBR internal pressure (0.215, 0.320, 0.416, and 0.519 bar) increases.
Applsci 10 06256 g003
Figure 4. (a) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line), its IQ curve (black scattered line), IQ fitting, replotted spectrum (red solid line), resonance fitting, and replotted IQ curve (yellow dashed line). The pressure is 0.229 bar. (b) The experimental spectrum shift as the MBR internal pressure (0.229, 0.327, 0.424, and 0.522 bar) increases.
Figure 4. (a) Experimental spectrum (blue scattered line), its IQ curve (black scattered line), IQ fitting, replotted spectrum (red solid line), resonance fitting, and replotted IQ curve (yellow dashed line). The pressure is 0.229 bar. (b) The experimental spectrum shift as the MBR internal pressure (0.229, 0.327, 0.424, and 0.522 bar) increases.
Applsci 10 06256 g004
Table 1. Overlapping resonances fitting results.
Table 1. Overlapping resonances fitting results.
Fitting Objectq1q2λd/pmg/MHzFCOD 3RCOD 4
Figure 2b Res. 1 (g = 0)1.45 × 1064.58 × 1050.34600.9800.981
Figure 2b Res. (g ≠ 0)3.50 × 1051.24 × 1049.391.19 × 1040.9980.937
Figure 2d IQ. 2 (g = 0)1.46 × 1064.80 × 1050.34000.9980.968
Figure 2d IQ. (g ≠ 0)5.10 × 1057.54 × 1043.003.76 × 1030.9960.790
Figure 2f IQ.1.19 × 1065.72 × 1052.4400.9560.862
Figure 2f Res.1.48 × 1064.62 × 1052.4201.000.863
1 Res., Resonance. 2 IQ., IQ curve. 3 FCOD, Fitting coefficient of determination (Fitting R-Square). 4 RCOD, Replotted coefficient of determination (Replotted R-Square).
Table 2. Weakly coupled resonance fitting results.
Table 2. Weakly coupled resonance fitting results.
Fitting Objectq1q2λd/pmg/MHzκT/MHzFCOD 3RCOD 4
Figure 3a Res. 1 (g ≠ 0)1.08 × 1064.09 × 1041731.20 × 1041.31 × 1040.9970.997
Figure 3a Res. (g = 0)9.22 × 1056.10 × 1050.39003090.9910.645
Figure 3b IQ. 2 (g ≠ 0)1.06 × 1064.08 × 1041731.20 × 1041.31 × 1040.9980.994
Figure 3b IQ. (g = 0)1.80 × 1069.78 × 1050.25902600.9990.893
1 Res., Resonance. 2 IQ., IQ curve. 3 FCOD, Fitting coefficient of determination (Fitting R-Square). 4 RCOD, Replotted coefficient of determination (Replotted R-Square).
Table 3. Strongly coupled resonance fitting results.
Table 3. Strongly coupled resonance fitting results.
Fitting Objectq1q2λd/pmg/GHzκT/MHzFCOD 3RCOD 4
Figure 4a Res. 1 (0.229 bar)1.03 × 1061.67 × 1061.411.432080.9960.933
Figure 4a IQ. 29.00 × 1051.64 × 1061.411.342790.9850.983
Figure 4b Res. (0.327 bar)9.69 × 1051.71 × 1061.241.372490.997-
Figure 4b Res. (0.424 bar)9.71 × 1061.79 × 1061.231.312630.998-
Figure 4b Res. (0.522 bar)9.71 × 1061.87 × 1061.151.252760.998-
1 Res., Resonance. 2 IQ., IQ curve. 3 FCOD, Fitting Coefficient of determination (Fitting R-Square). 4 RCOD, Replotted Coefficient of determination (Replotted R-Square).

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Hu, J.; Liu, S.; Li, B.; Guo, Z.; Wu, X.; Liu, L.; Xu, L. Highly Sensitive Complicated Spectrum Analysis in Micro-Bubble Resonators Using the Orthogonal Demodulation Pound–Drever–Hall Technique. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 6256. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10186256

AMA Style

Hu J, Liu S, Li B, Guo Z, Wu X, Liu L, Xu L. Highly Sensitive Complicated Spectrum Analysis in Micro-Bubble Resonators Using the Orthogonal Demodulation Pound–Drever–Hall Technique. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(18):6256. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10186256

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hu, Jinliang, Sheng Liu, Biao Li, Zhihe Guo, Xiang Wu, Liying Liu, and Lei Xu. 2020. "Highly Sensitive Complicated Spectrum Analysis in Micro-Bubble Resonators Using the Orthogonal Demodulation Pound–Drever–Hall Technique" Applied Sciences 10, no. 18: 6256. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10186256

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop