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Author

Haisu Li

Bio: Haisu Li is an academic researcher from Beijing Jiaotong University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Terahertz radiation & Fiber Bragg grating. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 69 publications receiving 603 citations. Previous affiliations of Haisu Li include University of New South Wales & University of Sydney.

Papers published on a yearly basis

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
20 Sep 2016
TL;DR: In this article, a single-mode, single-polarization hollow-core terahertz (THz) fiber with a metamaterial cladding, consisting of subwavelength-diameter metal wires embedded in a dielectric host, is presented.
Abstract: A key requirement for achieving high-density integration of terahertz (THz) systems is a strongly confining single-mode and low-loss waveguide. Several waveguide solutions based on technologies from both electronics and photonics have been proposed; among these, hollow-core waveguides are one of the best options for guiding THz radiation due to their very low material absorption of air. However, to minimize reflection losses, hollow-core waveguides typically have a core diameter larger than the operating wavelength, and as a consequence are multimode. Here, we report on a single-mode, single-polarization hollow-core THz fiber with a metamaterial cladding, consisting of subwavelength-diameter metal wires embedded in a dielectric host. The idea of using metal–dielectric hybrid cladding relies on the extreme anisotropy of wire metamaterials, which reflects transverse magnetic (TM) waves and transmits transverse electric waves, leading to a waveguide structure that only confines TM modes—thus halving the number of modes from the outset. Numerical simulations and experimental measurements confirm a wide single-mode single-polarization window ranging from 0.31 to 0.44 THz, with a wavelength-sized core (0.88 mm diameter). Our work overcomes a stumbling block for achieving compact and flexible single-mode THz waveguides, which may be important for future THz systems with high-density integration.

61 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulation results show HC-PBGF based OAM transmission is immune to fabrication inaccuracies near the hollow core, illustrating that HC- PBGF is a competitive candidate for high-capacity communication harnessing OAM multiplexing.
Abstract: We present the viability of exploiting a current hollow-core photonic bandgap fiber (HC-PBGF) to support orbital angular momentum (OAM) states. The photonic bandgap intrinsically provides a large refractive index spacing for guiding light, leading to OAM transmission with low crosstalk. From numerical simulations, a broad OAM±1 mode transmission window with satisfied effective index separations between vector modes (>10-4) and low confinement loss (<3 dB/km) covering 240 nm bandwidth is observed. The OAM purity (defined as normalized power weight for OAM mode) is found to be affected by the modal effective area. Simulation results also show HC-PBGF based OAM transmission is immune to fabrication inaccuracies near the hollow core. This work illustrates that HC-PBGF is a competitive candidate for high-capacity communication harnessing OAM multiplexing.

50 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel differential intensity-measurement high-sensitivity refractive index (RI) sensor based on cascaded dual-wavelength fiber laser and single-mode-no-core-hollow-core
Abstract: A novel differential intensity-measurement high-sensitivity refractive index (RI) sensor based on cascaded dual-wavelength fiber laser and single-mode-no-core-hollow-core-no-core-single-mode (SNHNS) structure is proposed and demonstrated. The sensing unit consists of one uniform fiber Bragg grating (FBG) and an SNHNS structure as all-fiber interferometer filter. The dual-wavelength fiber laser has a ring cavity composed of two FBGs with central wavelengths of 1550.10nm and 1553.61nm. Through monitoring the wavelength shift and the output power difference of the dual-wavelength fiber laser, the simultaneous measurement for RI and temperature is realized. In our experiment, the proposed fiber laser sensor exhibits high RI sensitivities of −193.1dB/RIU and 174.8dB/RIU in the range of 1.334-1.384. The relative variation of output power at the two FBG wavelengths shows a higher RI sensitivity of −367.9dB/RIU with better stability, which is greater than the traditional modal interferometer structure. Meanwhile, the temperature sensitivity of the proposed sensor is 8.53 × 10−3nm/°C, and the changes of laser output power caused by temperature are −0.223dB/°C and 0.215dB/°C.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is revealed that the OAM purity is dependent upon the confinement performance of THz fiber, and the hollow-core THz fibers with one and two rings of Kagome structures are comparably investigated.
Abstract: We explore terahertz (THz) orbital angular momentum (OAM) modes supported in multimode Kagome hollow-core fibers. Numerical models are adopted to characterize the effective indices and confinement losses of vector modes over 0.2–0.9 THz, where two low-loss transmission windows are observed. Linearly combining the vector modes, THz OAM states can be generated. Covering a broad bandwidth of 0.25 THz, the purity values of OAM modes are beyond 0.9. Using numerical simulations, the hollow-core THz fibers with one and two rings of Kagome structures are also comparably investigated. We reveal that the OAM purity is dependent upon the confinement performance of THz fiber.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a novel optical fiber magnetic field sensor based on D-shaped fiber modal interferometer and magnetic fluid is proposed and experimentally investigated, which can achieve high sensitivity, low cost and simple configuration.
Abstract: A novel optical fiber magnetic field sensor based on D-shaped fiber modal interferometer and magnetic fluid is proposed and experimentally investigated. Thanks to the etched cladding of D-shaped fiber, the resulting interference is strongly influenced by the surrounding magnetic fluid, which leads to a high magnetic field sensitivity. Simultaneous measurement of the magnetic field and temperature was realized by monitoring the wavelength shift of the two resonance dips at the same time. In the experiment, the magnetic field and temperature sensitivity can reach 99.68 pm/Oe and −77.49 pm/°C, respectively. The proposed magnetic field sensor based on D-shaped fiber is featured with high sensitivity, low cost and simple configuration.

45 citations


Cited by
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Proceedings Article
01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe photonic crystals as the analogy between electron waves in crystals and the light waves in artificial periodic dielectric structures, and the interest in periodic structures has been stimulated by the fast development of semiconductor technology that now allows the fabrication of artificial structures, whose period is comparable with the wavelength of light in the visible and infrared ranges.
Abstract: The term photonic crystals appears because of the analogy between electron waves in crystals and the light waves in artificial periodic dielectric structures. During the recent years the investigation of one-, two-and three-dimensional periodic structures has attracted a widespread attention of the world optics community because of great potentiality of such structures in advanced applied optical fields. The interest in periodic structures has been stimulated by the fast development of semiconductor technology that now allows the fabrication of artificial structures, whose period is comparable with the wavelength of light in the visible and infrared ranges.

2,722 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Article exploits near-field microscopy to image propagating plasmons in high-quality graphene encapsulated between two films of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), and finds unprecedentedly low plasmon damping combined with strong field confinement and confirms the high uniformity of this plAsmonic medium.
Abstract: Graphene plasmons were predicted to possess ultra-strong field confinement and very low damping at the same time, enabling new classes of devices for deep subwavelength metamaterials, single-photon nonlinearities, extraordinarily strong light-matter interactions and nano-optoelectronic switches. While all of these great prospects require low damping, thus far strong plasmon damping was observed, with both impurity scattering and many-body effects in graphene proposed as possible explanations. With the advent of van der Waals heterostructures, new methods have been developed to integrate graphene with other atomically flat materials. In this letter we exploit near-field microscopy to image propagating plasmons in high quality graphene encapsulated between two films of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN). We determine dispersion and particularly plasmon damping in real space. We find unprecedented low plasmon damping combined with strong field confinement, and identify the main damping channels as intrinsic thermal phonons in the graphene and dielectric losses in the h-BN. The observation and in-depth understanding of low plasmon damping is the key for the development of graphene nano-photonic and nano-optoelectronic devices.

679 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the history, guiding mechanism, recent advances, applications, and future prospects for hollow-core negative curvature fibers are described, and the future prospects of these fibers are discussed.
Abstract: We describe the history, guiding mechanism, recent advances, applications, and future prospects for hollow-core negative curvature fibers. We first review one-dimensional slab waveguides, two-dimensional annular core fibers, and negative curvature tube lattice fibers to illustrate the inhibited coupling guiding mechanism. Antiresonance in the glass at the core boundary and a wavenumber mismatch between the core and cladding modes inhibit coupling between the modes and have led to remarkably low loss in negative curvature fibers. We also summarize recent advances in negative curvature fibers that improve the performance of the fibers, including negative curvature that increases confinement, gaps between tubes that increase confinement and bandwidth, additional tubes that decrease mode coupling, tube structures that suppress higher-order modes, nested tubes that increase guidance, and tube parameters that decrease bend loss. Recent applications of negative curvature fibers are also presented, including mid-infrared fiber lasers, micromachining, and surgical procedures. At the end, we discuss the future prospects for negative curvature fibers.

217 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate a strong interface between single quantum emitters and topological photonic states and demonstrate the chiral emission of a quantum emitter into these modes and establish their robustness against sharp bends.
Abstract: The application of topology in optics has led to a new paradigm in developing photonic devices with robust properties against disorder Although considerable progress on topological phenomena has been achieved in the classical domain, the realization of strong light-matter coupling in the quantum domain remains unexplored We demonstrate a strong interface between single quantum emitters and topological photonic states Our approach creates robust counterpropagating edge states at the boundary of two distinct topological photonic crystals We demonstrate the chiral emission of a quantum emitter into these modes and establish their robustness against sharp bends This approach may enable the development of quantum optics devices with built-in protection, with potential applications in quantum simulation and sensing

154 citations