C03B37/01838

High chlorine content low attenuation optical fiber

An optical fiber having a core comprising silica and greater than 1.5 wt % chlorine and less than 0.5 wt % F, said core having a refractive index .sub.1MAX, and a inner cladding region having refractive index .sub.2MIN surrounding the core, where .sub.1MAX>.sub.2MIN.

Radiation-resistant laser optical fiber preform core rod and preparation method therefor

A radiation-resistant laser optical fiber preform core rod at least includes one type of activated ion (Yb.sup.3+, Er.sup.3+) and one or more types of co-doped ion (Al.sup.3+, P.sup.5+, Ge.sup.4+, Ce.sup.3+, F.sup.?), and OD group of 16-118 ppm. Irradiation resistance of core rod glass can be effectively improved by sequentially performing pre-treatments, i.e. deuterium loading, pre-irradiation and thermal annealing on a preform core rod. Electron paramagnetic resonance test shows that, under the same radiation condition, the radiation induced color center concentration in a preform core rod treated by the method above is lower than in an untreated core rod by one or more orders of magnitude. The obtained core rod can be used for preparing a radiation-resistant rare earth-doped silica fiber, and has the advantages of high laser slope efficiency, low background loss, being able to be used stably in a vacuum environment for a long time, for example.

RAYLEIGH SCATTERING BASED DISTRIBUTED FIBER SENSORS
20190056249 · 2019-02-21 ·

A fiber sensor includes an optical fiber configured for operation at a wavelength from about 800 nm to about 1600 nm. The optical fiber includes a cladding that is defined by a fiber outer diameter and a core that is surrounded by the cladding. The core of the optical fiber has a Rayleigh scattering coefficient, .sub.s, that is controlled by controlling a concentration of one or more dopants in the core. The Rayleigh scattering coefficient is tuned to be within a predetermined range of an optimum Rayleigh scattering coefficient for a given total length, L, of the optical fiber. The predetermined range is from about 70% of the optimum .sub.s to about 130% of the optimum .sub.s.

METHOD FOR EFFICIENTLY PREPARING DOPED OPTICAL FIBRE PREFORM AND DOPED OPTICAL FIBRE PREFORM

A method for preparing a doped optical fibre preform includes formulating, a rare earth material or a functional metal material and a co-doping agent into a doping solution, mixing a high-purity quartz powder with the doping solution, drying same at a temperature of 100C.-150C. for 12-48 hours, crushing and screening the same to obtain a doped quartz powder; depositing the doped quartz powder onto the surface of a target rod to form a doped core layer; replacing the doped quartz powder with the high-purity quartz powder, and depositing the high-purity quartz powder onto the surface of the doped core layer to form a quartz outer cladding; and removing the target rod, and gradually collapsing the entirety formed from the doped core layer and the quartz outer cladding at a high temperature to obtain the doped optical fibre preform.

HIGH CHLORINE CONTENT LOW ATTENUATION OPTICAL FIBER

An optical fiber having a core comprising silica and greater than 1.5 wt % chlorine and less than 0.5 wt % F, said core having a refractive index .sub.1MAX, and a inner cladding region having refractive index .sub.2MIN surrounding the core, where .sub.1MAX>.sub.2MIN.

High chlorine content low attenuation optical fiber

An optical fiber having a core comprising silica and greater than 1.5 wt % chlorine and less than 0.5 wt % F, said core having a refractive index .sub.1MAX, and a inner cladding region having refractive index .sub.2MIN surrounding the core, where .sub.1MAX>.sub.2MIN.

Optical Fiber, Optical Fiber Preparation Method, and Optical Fiber Amplifier
20250316945 · 2025-10-09 ·

Proportions of the element erbium, the element aluminum, and the element phosphorus are adjusted during optical fiber preparation so that aluminum phosphate is formed around the element erbium in a prepared optical fiber, a probability that the element erbium in the optical fiber transits to a high energy level is reduced, and an excited-state absorption effect of the element erbium in the optical fiber on an optical signal is suppressed.