Silicon photonics combined with complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) electronics leveraging wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) are of interest for AI, optical computing, and high-speed Optical IO applications [1,2]. To power these applications, multi-wavelength light sources based on laser arrays [3] or mode locked lasers (MLL) have been proposed and demonstrated [4]. As optical sources mature, the CW-WDM multisource agreement (MSA) has emerged to define a set of wavelength grids and power levels so different applications can leverage a common set of laser technologies [5]. In this paper we demonstrate the first multi-wavelength optical source compliant with the CW-WDM MSA standard that operates from room temperatures through 100°C. The SuperNovaTM outputs 8 wavelengths across 8 fibers for a total of 64 optical carriers and complies with the 8+1 MSA wavelength plan (1 optional wavelength) with channels spaced at 400+/-100 GHz and output power within the Type 2 power class. The optical source is mode hop free with >40dB SMSR, <145 dB/Hz RIN, and <20 MHz linewidth across all channels and all operating conditions.
A set of laser beam shaping optics is designed by an iterative method using an adaptive additive algorithm to transform a Gaussian beam into a pitchfork beam. Two diffractive optical elements are designed based on Fresnel diffraction to reduce the amount of energy in the first-order diffraction ring and to increase the depth of focus for the optical system. These two beam properties are found to depend on the diameter of the desired beam and the Airy disk diameter. If the diameter of the desired beam is large, then the optical system yields better results in achieving the above-mentioned two beam properties. The performance of the diffractive optical elements is compared to a previous laser beam shaping system designed by the ray-tracing technique. A pinhole scanning power meter is used to measure the laser irradiance profile at the focal plane to verify the existence of the pitchfork beam. The irradiance profile measurement shows that diffractive optical elements allow better control for reducing the amount of energy in the diffraction side lobes.
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