Lidar

Chip-Scale FMCW Using Pockels Laser Sets New Benchmark

Pockels laser for chip-scale FMCW LiDAR
Pockels laser for chip-scale FMCW LiDAR

Pockels Laser for Chip-Scale FMCW Lidar Sets a New Benchmark

Chip-scale, solid-state, and frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) are hot terms in lidar—and for good reason. These technologies are advancing rapidly. One standout example is a new Pockels laser for chip-scale FMCW lidar, developed by researchers at the University of Rochester and UC Santa Barbara. This system combines exceptional stability, ultrafast tunability, and high performance in a compact form, addressing key limitations of previous chip-scale lasers.

What Is a Pockels Laser and Why It Matters for Chip-Scale FMCW Lidar

The key innovation behind this system is its use of a Pockels laser, which tunes its frequency by applying an electric field to lithium niobate—a crystal whose refractive index changes in response. This allows for ultrafast, precise control of the laser’s frequency, a crucial capability for coherent lidar. A reflective semiconductor optical amplifier (RSOA) boosts the light’s intensity inside the laser cavity, making the system compact yet powerful. Together, these components enable a stable, tunable systems.

Performance Specs That Elevate FMCW Lidar

  • Narrow intrinsic linewidth of 167 Hz: The laser’s frequency is extremely stable over time, reducing phase noise—random fluctuations that degrade signal quality—and allowing for cleaner, more precise range and velocity measurements using coherent detection.
  • Mode-hop-free tuning range of 24 GHz: The laser can sweep across a broad frequency range smoothly, avoiding disruptive jumps between optical modes. This is critical in FMCW lidar, where range is derived from the frequency shift of reflected signals.
  • Chirping rate of 20 exahertz per second (20 × 1018 Hz/s): Allows the laser to ramp its frequency extraordinarily fast, enabling higher frame rates and better velocity resolution in dynamic environments like autonomous navigation.
  • Modulation bandwidth exceeding 10 GHz: Gives the system the ability to respond to high-speed control signals, enabling precise frequency shaping and low-latency scanning.

The chipring rate and modulation bandwidth represent “orders of magnitude” improvement over existing lasers, according to the authors.

Why It’s a Big Deal

This work demonstrates that chip-scale lasers are improving in many regards, including stability, tuning range, and speed. By combining an ultranarrow linewidth, wide mode-hop-free tuning, and record-setting chirp performance, this Pockels-based laser clears several major hurdles for integrated FMCW lidar. It pushes chip-scale technology closer to delivering the kind of resolution, velocity sensing, and update rates needed for advanced applications—from autonomous navigation to precision mapping—while keeping the system compact, scalable, and manufacturable.

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