Prof. Dr. Birgit Stiller

Professor

My fields of expertise are Brillouin scattering and optomechanics, nonlinear fiber optics and photonic circuits, as well as classical and quantum communications. The projects in my group span from nonlinear optics to quantum optics with a focus on light-sound interactions and waveguide optomechanics. We want to explore optoacoustic interaction experimentally at the classical and quantum level with suitably engineered microstructured fibres and nanowaveguides to manipulate, in this way, light states

2025

Brillouin-enhanced four-wave mixing with optical chiral states

Xinglin Zeng, Birgit Stiller

APL Photonics 10 076119 (2025) | Journal | PDF

Brillouin-enhanced four-wave mixing (BE-FWM)—also known as Brillouin dynamic gratings—is an important nonlinear effect in photonics that couples four light waves by traveling acoustic waves. The effect has received much attention in the past few decades, especially for applications in fiber sensing, signal processing, and optical delay lines. Here, we report BE-FWM with optical chiral states (i.e., circular polarization and vortex states) in twisted photonic crystal fiber, by leveraging the topology-selective Brillouin effect. Phase-matching has the consequence that the traveling acoustic gratings created by circularly polarized vortex pump and Stokes in the stimulated Brillouin scattering can be used to modulate a frequency-shifted probe, where the pump/Stokes and probe have different circular polarization or topological charges. Based on our findings, we demonstrate cross-frequency selective information transfer and show that the information is transferred only when pump and probe have opposite circular polarization.

Cavity-less Brillouin strong coupling in a solid-state continuous system

Laura Blázquez Martínez, Changlong Zhu, Birgit Stiller

arXiv 2507.08673 (2025) | Preprint | PDF

Strongly coupling two systems allows them to exchange coherent information before the systems decohere. This important regime in light-matter interactions has predominantly been reached in optical resonator configurations. In this work, we present the experimental realization of strong coupling between optical and acoustic fields within a continuum of modes in a cavity-less configuration after a single-pass through an optical waveguide. The underlying physical effect of anti-Stokes Brillouin-Mandelstam scattering in a highly nonlinear fiber at T = 4 K allows us to experimentally demonstrate strong coupling in a waveguide scenario. We show the splitting of the optoacoustic spectral response and introduce a novel technique to measure the avoided crossing of hybrid optoacoustic modes via forced detuning. This demonstration opens a path towards in-line acoustic-waves-based quantum signal processing in waveguide systems.

Frequency conversion of vortex states by chiral forward Brillouin scattering in twisted photonic crystal fibre

Xinglin Zeng, Philip St.J. Russell, Birgit Stiller

Photonics Research 13 1997-2012 (2025) | Preprint | PDF

Optical vortex states-higher optical modes with helical phase progression and carrying orbital angular momentum-have been explored to increase the flexibility and capacity of optical fibres employed for example in mode-division-multiplexing, optical trapping and multimode imaging. A common requirement in such systems is high fidelity transfer of signals between different frequency bands and modes, which for vortex modes is not so straightforward. Here we report intervortex conversion between backward-propagating circularly polarised vortex modes at one wavelength, using chiral flexural phonons excited by chiral forward stimulated Brillouin scattering at a different wavelength. The experiment is carried out using chiral photonic crystal fibre, which robustly preserves circular polarisation states. The chiral acoustic wave, which has the geometry of a spinning single-spiral corkscrew, provides the orbital angular momentum necessary to conserve angular momentum between the coupled optical vortex modes. The results open up new opportunities for interband optical frequency conversion and the manipulation of vortex states in both classical and quantum regimes.

Brillouin-based storage of QPSK signals with fully tunable phase retrieval

Olivia Saffer, Jesús Humberto Marines Cabello, Steven Becker, Andreas Geilen, Birgit Stiller

APL Photonics 10 060802 (2025) | Journal | PDF

Photonic memory is an important building block to delay, route and buffer optical information, for instance in optical interconnects or for recurrent optical signal processing. Photonic-phononic memory based on stimulated Brillouin-Mandelstam scattering (SBS) has been demonstrated as a coherent optical storage approach with broad bandwidth, frequency selectivity and intrinsic nonreciprocity. Here, we experimentally demonstrated the storage of quadrature-phase encoded data at room temperature and at cryogenic temperatures. We store and retrieve the 2-bit states {00,01,10,11} encoded as optical pulses with the phases {0,pi/2,pi,3pi/2} - a quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) signal. The 2-bit signals are retrieved from the acoustic domain with a global phase rotation of π, which is inherent in the process due to SBS. We also demonstrate full phase control over the retrieved data based on two different handles: by detuning slightly from the SBS resonance, or by changing the storage time in the memory scheme we can cover the full range [0,2pi). At a cryogenic temperature of 3.9 K, we have increased readout efficiency as well as gained access to longer storage times, which results in a detectable signal at 140 ns. All in all, the work sets the cornerstone for optoacoustic memory schemes with phase-encoded data

Quantum vibrations – sound waves shake photonic quantum technologies

Birgit Stiller

Europhysics News 56 39-42 (2025) | Journal | PDF

In physics experiments, mechanical and acoustic vibrations are often considered as disturbing noise and a nuisance. For example, the field of optomechanics came to life because of gravitation waves. To achieve the extreme sensitivity required to detect tiny distortions in spacetime caused by passing gravitational waves, it is crucial to overcome any noisy environments.

All-optical nonlinear activation function based on stimulated Brillouin scattering

Grigorii Slinkov, Steven Becker, Dirk Englund, Birgit Stiller

Nanophotonics (2025) | Journal | PDF

Optical neural networks have demonstrated their potential to overcome the computational bottleneck of modern digital electronics. However, their development towards high-performing computing alternatives is hindered by one of the optical neural networks’ key components: the activation function. Most of the reported activation functions rely on opto-electronic conversion, sacrificing the unique advantages of photonics, such as resource-efficient coherent and frequency-multiplexed information encoding. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a photonic nonlinear activation function based on stimulated Brillouin scattering. It is coherent and frequency selective and can be tuned all-optically to take LEAKYRELU, SIGMOID, and QUADRATIC shape. Our design compensates for the insertion loss automatically by providing net gain as high as 20 dB, paving the way for deep optical neural networks.

Scientific career

  • since 2024 also W3 Full Professorship at Leibniz University Hannover
  • 04/2019 – Independent Max Planck Research Group Leader (centrally funded, selected in the competitive call 2017), Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light, Germany, Quantum Optoacoustic
  • 04/2021- 09/2022 Temporary W3 Full Professorship (Lehrstuhlvertretung), Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), Chair of Optics
  • 06/2015 – 02/2019 Research fellow, The University of Sydney, CUDOS, Australia, Nonlinear Optical Phononics (Prof. Benjamin Eggleton)
  • 10/2012 – 05/2015 Postdoctoral fellow, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light, Germany, Optical Communication and Quantum Communication (Prof. Gerd Leuchs)
  • 02/2012 – 09/2012Postdoctoral fellow, CNRS Institute FEMTO-ST, Besançon, France, Nonlinear Optics and Optoacoustics (Dr. Thibaut Sylvestre)

 

Academic education

  • 01/2009 – 01/2012 Doctoral thesis, CNRS Institute FEMTO-ST, Besançon, France, “Brillouin scattering in photonic crystal fibre: from fundamentals to fibre optic sensors”, (Dr. Thibaut Sylvestre, Dr. Hervé Maillotte)
  • 10/2003 – 12/2008 Master’s degree Mathematics / Physics / Education, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany, Master thesis: „Fabrication of periodically poled LiNbO3 for nonlinear optical frequency conversion by quasi phase matching“ (Prof. Jan-Peter Meyn, Prof. Christine Silberhorn)

 

Selected awards, fellowships, services

  • 2024 - ERC Consolidator Grant
  • 2024 - Henriette Hertz Scout of the Humbold Foundation
  • 2024 - Photonics100 2025 List
  • 2022 Conference chair, Lorentz Workshop “Quantum Optics meets Acoustics”, Leiden, Netherlands (14-18 November 2021)
  • 2020 Editorial board New Journal of Physics
  • 2020 Fellow of the Max Planck School of Photonics
  • 2019-2021 Conference chair, “Workshop on Optomechanics and Brillouin scattering - WOMBAT 2021/2022”, Erlangen, Germany (16-18 June 2021 and 14-17 June 2022)
  • 2019 Conference chair, “Workshop on Optomechanics and Brillouin scattering - WOMBAT 2021”, Erlangen, Germany (planned for 16-18 June 2021)
  • 2019 Guest editor for APL Photonics for the Topical Issue “Optoacoustics - Advances in High-Frequency Optomechanics and Brillouin Scattering”
  • 2018 Co-Chair, “Nanophotonics 2018 – the next frontier”, Canberra, Australia
  • 2016 Co-Chair, “Quantum photonic connections conference”, Sydney, Australia
  • 2013 – 2015 Cusanuswerk career development program
  • 2011 Prix A’Doc 2011 of the Université Franche-Comté
  • 2009 – 2011 CNRS PhD Scholarship
  • 2009 Ohm-Preis 2008/2009 of the Physics department at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany
  • 2004 – 2008 Scholarship Cusanuswerk

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