Electrooptic sampling of low temperature GaAs pulse generators for oscilloscope calibration |
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Authors: | A. J. A. Smith A. G. Roddie D. Henderson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Centre for Electromagnetic and Time Metrology, National Physical Laboratory, Queens Road, Teddington, TW11 0LW Middlesex, UK |
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Abstract: | Optoelectronic generation of well characterized ultrashort electrical pulses plays an important role in the calibration of fast-sampling oscilloscopes. In this paper the authors describe the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) pulse generator, comprising a femtosecond laser and an ultrafast photoconductive switch which can generate electrical pulses as short as 650 fs. The photoconductive switch consists of a GaAs substrate with a top GaAs layer grown under low temperature conditions to ensure a subpicosecond recombination rate. The technique of electrooptic sampling is used to measure pulses on planar transmission lines, such as coplanar waveguide and coplanar stripline. Good agreement is shown between electrooptic sampling measurement and the modelling of pulse propagation along a coplanar waveguide, enabling one to optimize a design of a calibration test source. The use of a pulse generator to calibrate a 50 GHz sampling oscilloscope is described. |
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