Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Convective Nozaki-Bekki holes in a long cavity OCT laser

2019, Slepneva, Svetlana, O'Shaughnessy, Ben, Vladimirov, Andrei G., Rica, Sergio, Viktorov, Evgeny A., Huyet, Guillaume

We show, both experimentally and theoretically, that the loss of coherence of a long cavity optical coherence tomography (OCT) laser can be described as a transition from laminar to turbulent flows. We demonstrate that in this strongly dissipative system, the transition happens either via an absolute or a convective instability depending on the laser parameters. In the latter case, the transition occurs via formation of localised structures in the laminar regime, which trigger the formation of growing and drifting puffs of turbulence. Experimentally, we demonstrate that these turbulent bursts are seeded by appearance of Nozaki-Bekki holes, characterised by the zero field amplitude and π phase jumps. Our experimental results are supported with numerical simulations based on the delay differential equations model.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Characterization of encapsulated graphene layers using extreme ultraviolet coherence tomography

2022, Wiesner, Felix, Skruszewicz, Slawomir, Rödel, Christian, Abel, Johann Jakob, Reinhard, Julius, Wünsche, Martin, Nathanael, Jan, Grünewald, Marco, Hübner, Uwe, Paulus, Gerhard G., Fuchs, Silvio

Many applications of two-dimensional materials such as graphene require the encapsulation in bulk material. While a variety of methods exist for the structural and functional characterization of uncovered 2D materials, there is a need for methods that image encapsulated 2D materials as well as the surrounding matter. In this work, we use extreme ultraviolet coherence tomography to image graphene flakes buried beneath 200 nm of silicon. We show that we can identify mono-, bi-, and trilayers of graphene and quantify the thickness of the silicon bulk on top by measuring the depth-resolved reflectivity. Furthermore, we estimate the quality of the graphene interface by incorporating a model that includes the interface roughness. These results are verified by atomic force microscopy and prove that extreme ultraviolet coherence tomography is a suitable tool for imaging 2D materials embedded in bulk materials.